I agree but the shift I’m seeing is substantially more than expected
Nah they are both 40gn going similar velocity.
Paper has 5 diamonds so 3” can be off paper.
sounds like the barrel is the first place to look. I know what my next big ticket purchase will be.
Unless by the ammo you mean to shoot the same type so I don’t have a POI shift.
Not sure whats confusing folks here. I’m getting abnormally large POI shifts between ammo types.
No its not between drastically different types either.
...Other possibilities may arise, too.
...Not sure whats confusing folks here. I’m getting abnormally large POI shifts between ammo types. ...
Is this your first rifle?
Sounds like the barrel is the first place to look. I know what my next big ticket purchase will be.
Nobody else here thinks that your POI shift with different ammo types is "abnormally large". If I were in your shoes, I would consider the possibility that I might be mistaken.
I’d have to disagree. As I’ve stated multiple times, POI shift is expected. This particular rifle has a lot of shift, way more than I’ve seen. Maybe it’s acceptable to other people but I’d rather not have a rifle that has that much shift. To be honest, 3” shift might be on the conservative side. Either way the shift is unacceptable in my opinion and not practical for the rifles intended purpose.
The tight bore theory might explain why the shift is exaggerated.
Did you bother checking if the stock is loose, if your scope is broken? But the fact you have not answered it makes us believe you just want us to agreed so you can justify buying a new barrel.
That's like saying I have a vibration in my car, must got a broken belt in my tire. When your lug nuts are loose.
The big question here is why does it matter. Why not stick with one type of ammo if it shoots good groups with multiple? Rezeroing after an ammo change shouldn’t be a big issue.
Its just an annoyance. For instance if I am shooting offhand and switch ammo brands/types, my POI shifts more than a beer can away. I have to sight it in for each ammo type. 6 other 22lr rifle’s don’t have half as much shift.
Hey Coleman-I get it, but you might be frustrated with something that is totally normal, and not just with rimfires. With centerfire, you can load and try to correct for small deviations with different powders/charges, bullet weight/type, primers, seating depth, etc.
Rimfire=the gun likes it or it doesn't.
Not that my own experience matters much, but I've been shooting 22LR pretty enthusiastically for over 3 decades, and in all that time...and with all the guns that have come and gone, what you're describing has been exactly what I've seen with every gun except 1. What you're experiencing really IS the norm, and likely not a barrel issue at all. I think you might have gone into this with unrealistic expectations to be honest. Not meant to be a smarmy remark, but rimfire ammo is like any other factory ammo in any caliber..only you don't have the luxury of rolling your own to try and change a result down range. If you have even found one type your rifle likes, I'd suggest you go with it and enjoy. Any other expectation of the rifle doesn't seem realistic.
On a related note I guess, whenever a new ammo type comes out I always read reviews and see what kind of results people are getting and with what rifle. For SURE...if I see a gun I like shooting well with an ammo I haven't tried, that ammo goes to the top of the shopping list to try. I may get a better result than what I'm getting...or I may not. But I can't change the gun's preference.
I often see 1" poi shift between brands of 22 rimfire at 50 yards. I also see a shift from a cold bore, and transition in shift as I switch ammo types. It takes a few shots to drift back to the same poi after using a different type of ammo. My guess is that it has to do with conditioning of the bore. Different lubes and dry ammo with copper plating.