I've often wondered just what a shooter means when he says about a rifle "it will shoot 1/2" groups all day." Or when he refers to a rifle as a 1/2MOA gun. Does this mean that all his groups hover around 1/2MOA? Or does it mean that he was able to shoot one or two 1/2MOA groups, while his other groups with the rifle were closer to 1MOA or greater?
In my opinion, the NRA practice (in their rifle tests reported in the American Rifleman) of shooting five consecutive 5-shot groups at 100 yards and reporting the average is a very good way to characterize rifle accuracy. It's important that the report is of consecutive groups so that cherry-picking of groups is not occurring. Using the average of 10 consecutive 5-shot groups is even better. It seems that some shooters believe that, if their rifle will produce one 1/2" group, that this indicates the guns' inherent accuracy and that larger groups are irrelevant.
Having given my preference for reporting accuracy, what do you guys understand it to mean when a shooter reports on his 1/2MOA rifle?
In my opinion, the NRA practice (in their rifle tests reported in the American Rifleman) of shooting five consecutive 5-shot groups at 100 yards and reporting the average is a very good way to characterize rifle accuracy. It's important that the report is of consecutive groups so that cherry-picking of groups is not occurring. Using the average of 10 consecutive 5-shot groups is even better. It seems that some shooters believe that, if their rifle will produce one 1/2" group, that this indicates the guns' inherent accuracy and that larger groups are irrelevant.
Having given my preference for reporting accuracy, what do you guys understand it to mean when a shooter reports on his 1/2MOA rifle?




















































