rnbra-shooter
CGN Ultra frequent flyer
- Location
- New Brunswick
Canuck525 that's a real puzzler. Your very(!) good ES and SD indicates that you have a nice hot, uniform load. Really tight groups at 100 means that you, your scope, your rifle, your ammo, your shooting technique, are all working well. Assuming you are shooting 1/2 MOA at 100 or better on a repeatable basis, there's simply no way you can do that without everything being right. Except in horrid wind conditions, these bullets should be flying through the centre of the target at 400y.
And yet, three quarters of your groups at 400y (which is not very far) are pushing 1 MOA. Something is wrong.
What bullets are you using? Have you only ever used one kind, or have you tried several? What is your muzzle velocity and what is your barrel's twist rate?(just wondering here if you have some weird nearly-failing bullet problem).
Next time you are at 100y, try shooting a group or two using your 400y elevation setting, or even a few MOA more (make sure you have enough paper above your aiming point to capture the bullets). Can you shoot sub-half-MOA, or is it nearly 1 MOA? I only suggest this in case the problem is a weak erector spring, which is snug enough at your 100y setting, but not snug when you've unscrewed the elevation knob to get to your 400y setting. I admit this is a low-probability item.
And yet, three quarters of your groups at 400y (which is not very far) are pushing 1 MOA. Something is wrong.
What bullets are you using? Have you only ever used one kind, or have you tried several? What is your muzzle velocity and what is your barrel's twist rate?(just wondering here if you have some weird nearly-failing bullet problem).
Next time you are at 100y, try shooting a group or two using your 400y elevation setting, or even a few MOA more (make sure you have enough paper above your aiming point to capture the bullets). Can you shoot sub-half-MOA, or is it nearly 1 MOA? I only suggest this in case the problem is a weak erector spring, which is snug enough at your 100y setting, but not snug when you've unscrewed the elevation knob to get to your 400y setting. I admit this is a low-probability item.