Kinda makes sense to know where numbers 1,2,3 and 4 go.
Well, you got me there.
What I was trying to say (I dont speak too good and write even worster)
Is that the range is a good place to take out the some of the human factor.
Use a good front and rear rest, let the rifle tell you where that first cold shot
will land with the ammo you are using.
But you're right, at the range I usually fire a few "dirty-up" rounds before getting down and serious.
But, knowing where that first shot hits is important, I dont want to warm up my rifle again every
target change. I can tell my rifle will shoot about 1" +/- left @300 yds if at ambient temperature
(after my dirty-up to get rid of any oil, rags, and tid bits that may be in the barrel)
So I just compensate..a tad on a cold shot, a bit less on second and back to normal after that,
it's not an exact science but it helps my first group.
I can only ASSUME a hunter relies on that first cold shot, so I can also ASSUME it must be important.
After assuming all that, I might as well ASSUME that a long range hunter has "dirtied-up" his
barrel and got rid of anything that may be lurking in there, waiting to mess up that first trajectory.
An assumption based on an assumption, followed by an assumption is called what again?