A guy can do ok at shorter ranges with a short barrel - maybe out to 600 yards when conditions are calm.
Short is a relative term depending upon caliber. If it's a 308 - 20 inches is really short - if it's a 223 or 6BR 20-23 inches is not so bad.
I do not know where all these ideas of shorter barrels only being able to shoot close range come from.
I have a minor tantrum as most of my people do, when we miss the 2.5" gong at 1000 yards. I do not know where all these ideas of shorter barrels only being able to shoot close range come from.
Are you suggesting that you guys can average 1/4 min or better at 1000yds?
Jerry
It's pointless to add barrel length if it doesn't allow you to get to a higher accuracy node.
Not saying short barrels won't shoot, but I just don't see them dominating @ 1000yds in F-Class as my experience is limited to that.Please do NOT make claims like this near any of my 308s. They might believe this crap. I shoot a pair of 22" barrelled 308s well beyond the 1000 yard mark. Several of my employees also shoot similar rigs with the same results as do many of our clients.
My best to date was clay pigeons in a sand bank set out at 1400 yards.
I have a minor tantrum as most of my people do, when we miss the 2.5" gong at 1000 yards. I do not know where all these ideas of shorter barrels only being able to shoot close range come from.
2.5" @ 1000yds most of the time? That's quite the claim. What bullets are accomplishing this?
Not saying short barrels won't shoot, but I just don't see them dominating @ 1000yds in F-Class as my experience is limited to that.
2.5" @ 1000yds most of the time? That's quite the claim. What bullets are accomplishing this?
Not saying short barrels won't shoot, but I just don't see them dominating @ 1000yds in F-Class as my experience is limited to that.
Many days we do, other days no so much. You know how that works, some days it just doesn't pay to get out of bed, so to speak and others, thankfully more than most it does.
A few years ago you hosted a shoot that some of "us" attended. This was when we shot clay birds for the 1st time at real distance. as I recall 3 of "us" managed a large number of broken birds at the 1400 yard mark you set them at with our stubby little barrels.
And how many beginners (which is likely what they were if they didn't come back) have gotten their butts kicked with long barrels and never came back? Many new people who show up at matches don't even know the required come ups at each distance. It isn't any kind of stretch for them not to have chosen a proper bullet/load either.