Some of the best ammo seems to often be the greasiest. I have yet to try, but I wonder if excessive lube on the bullet or on the cases from handling during loading might have an effect? I may try wiping ammo before loading in mags at some point. Anyone else try this?Thanks, Meroh.
On a shooting-related note that may be familiar to shooters at 100 yards, it's not uncommon to see rounds have somewhat unexpected POI. POI usually reasonably correlates with ammo MV, but often enough it doesn't. MV and POI are mismatched. Faster rounds can strike lower than slower ones and vise versa. Two rounds with very different MVs can have the same POI or two rounds with the same MVs can have very different POI.
Below are two examples that I observed this morning. The first is the first ten shot group I shot with a lot of M+, the second is the last ten shot group I shot with the same lot. Ammo MV had increased with this lot as time passed.
In the first example, nine rounds went into a "group" and there was one stray. The nine rounds in the group had MVs from 1048.5 fps to 1068.1 fps. The stray wasn't errant because of its MV.
In the second example, two rounds, shots 9 and 10, had very nearly the same MV but they had very different POI, separated by almost one inch of vertical.
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A couple of years ago a shooting buddy of mine experimented with wiping rimfire ammo. He tried a few different methods, even tried isopropyl alcohol. Long story is it was very time consuming and all attempts produced poor results compared to unaltered ammo.Some of the best ammo seems to often be the greasiest. I have yet to try, but I wonder if excessive lube on the bullet or on the cases from handling during loading might have an effect? I may try wiping ammo before loading in mags at some point. Anyone else try this?
I've seen "extra" lube once on ammo such as SK -- and it did make a significant difference. The lube on the many 1000's of rounds of Midas I've shot has been consistent and not an issue.Some of the best ammo seems to often be the greasiest. I have yet to try, but I wonder if excessive lube on the bullet or on the cases from handling during loading might have an effect? I may try wiping ammo before loading in mags at some point. Anyone else try this?
Tried it with Tac 22 ( black box ) I know not the most quality ammo. But the lots I have are like they dunked it in oil. Makes it very difficult to load into 10/22 mags. So I tried spraying a cloth with 99% alcohol and wiping down the rounds. And like Longstud, I had similar results.Some of the best ammo seems to often be the greasiest. I have yet to try, but I wonder if excessive lube on the bullet or on the cases from handling during loading might have an effect? I may try wiping ammo before loading in mags at some point. Anyone else try this?
Thanks guys, you saved me the trouble!!!A couple of years ago a shooting buddy of mine experimented with wiping rimfire ammo. He tried a few different methods, even tried isopropyl alcohol. Long story is it was very time consuming and all attempts produced poor results compared to unaltered ammo.
If it wasnt required they wouldnt bother putting it on. As much a PITA it is I think the synthetic variety is much more reliable in our inclement weather. Tallow and wax isnt really suited for our weather extremes. Ive had spectacular accuracy with the Eley variants and actually better groups on average for the last couple years , however. That goop builds up and causes problems after a while. Dont blow a gasket just yet. For BR shooters its not a problem but for other disiplines it has proven to be one for me. My semi custom gun has run over 15,000 rounds without any malfunction, until I started shooting Eley which shot better groups at all ranges out too 400 plus yards. The first time it failed was like a major shock too me. Cleaned the gun and was good for a while and then another FTF. I just kept shooting too see what happened and the FTF rate started to increase. The lube accumulates up like making a candle, the layers just keep building. I now just tear my gun down completely much more than before and have no problems. Bolt guns wont probably be affected the same but just an FYI and when the temp drops it gets worse in my experienceNot only may removing the lubricant from the bullets impact accuracy performance, it results in leading in the bore. That's never desirable.
I was thinking degreasing the cases, not the bullets.Not only may removing the lubricant from the bullets impact accuracy performance, it results in leading in the bore. That's never desirable.
My 455 was not new when I got it. I put about 600 rounds through it of CCI Std and Tack .22, I noted that bullets were getting harder to chamber and tighter to remove. I gave it a good cleaning. I think it was a combo of tight chamber, tight headspace combined with carbon (chemical ash GSR) building up a bit faster than with dry bullets. It took way more scrubbing that I would have thought to get it moving freely again. I can only imagine the issues with a target grade semi.If it wasnt required they wouldnt bother putting it on. As much a PITA it is I think the synthetic variety is much more reliable in our inclement weather. Tallow and wax isnt really suited for our weather extremes. Ive had spectacular accuracy with the Eley variants and actually better groups on average for the last couple years , however. That goop builds up and causes problems after a while. Dont blow a gasket just yet. For BR shooters its not a problem but for other disiplines it has proven to be one for me. My semi custom gun has run over 15,000 rounds without any malfunction, until I started shooting Eley which shot better groups at all ranges out too 400 plus yards. The first time it failed was like a major shock too me. Cleaned the gun and was good for a while and then another FTF. I just kept shooting too see what happened and the FTF rate started to increase. The lube accumulates up like making a candle, the layers just keep building. I now just tear my gun down completely much more than before and have no problems. Bolt guns wont probably be affected the same but just an FYI and when the temp drops it gets worse in my experience
I know that in our sport, we try and remove the variables so that each shot is a repeatable clone of the last one. Yet visually from a statistical standpoint one might conclude that it is a fairly even random distribution, and graphically the SD appears to be sot so bad either. When Groups like this become repeatable, that is a good sign that we are approaching the apex of what either we, our rigs, our ammo have been taken to their present limit; time to look for other things to improve that we may never have considered..Here's another example of ammo behaviour where MV and POI clearly don't match. This happens regularly is increasingly obvious as distance increases. Faster rounds may strike lower than slower ones and vise versa. Rounds with different MVs may have the same POI.
In the group below, shot #10 had the fastest MV at 1094.9 fps but it had the lowest POI of all the ten rounds in the group.
The ES of the other rounds was 1072.2 fps - 1089.5 fps.
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A third requirement is knowing when to shoot. Shooting good results at 100 yards requires one of two things. Either an excellent ability to read wind flags (which is increasingly difficult the further the target) or as much an absence of air movement between shooter and target as possible.