At other times, hitting that aiming point, or a particular place in relation to that (3" high), is most important.
I may add to my question. I see people at the range taking like one shot every few minutes. Is this acceptable, like waiting until the barrel cools down?
Just do like Brian Litz does and others……shoot such high round count groups that your barrel is burned out, cause it’s the statistically correct way to do it. Must be nice to get free bullets and endless primers lol.
"burned out barrel" - is perhaps a thing - but unlike normal person, some of the higher end target guys view a barrel as a consumable - like a brass case - going to have a useful lifetime, then gets replaced. Is at least one poster on CGN that used to buy barrels three at a time - would try all three - select the "best one" for competition - sell the other ones - was like an annual thing - often had spare barrels on hand - is NOT how 99% of one-gun shooters think about it. At least once, I bought two of his "discards" - plenty good enough for me!!! Goes to fallacy of some that they will get "just as good as" results - using their used store bought, off the shelf, rifle. Is likely the difference between a 0.15" 10 shot group at 100 yards, and a 1.5" 10 shot group.
You like your numbers?
Finding the best load via tons of large number groups via Litz method, he would have consumed the barrel before he came to a conclusion. Also most pro shooters tweak their loads if needed as well. So via Litz that would mean many more rounds downrange at every temp, baro change or venue change.
Don’t get me wrong the large groups thing has merit, but to a point. Small groups can get you close enough to do a test at the distance you are shooting at, with only a small tweak. Some would leave the load alone and twist the tuner instead to tweak. I think the top shooters can adapt to change along with wind to overcome other factors.
I’m not sure that Cortina is sponsored by Berger. He is always in Lapua gear, and I think I remember him using an online, search engine that sends him auto notifications.
Yes if you compete a lot barrels are just like tires on a race car, particularly in the new whiz bang calibres. Litz has actually convinced me the opposite. Shoot 150 rounds or so go to a known load for the barrell and reamer to tweek it slightly and I am off to compete. He has also convinced me as Cat says to ensure my zero is spot on with larger groups, at least the number I will shoot in the COF in my case at least 12 for my discipline. As far as Precision goes I just don't buy 0.15 groups all day long if I do my part, I bet if I offered $100 for 5 10 shot groups I would not loose any money. Of course the entire exercise would cost you that much at today's prices.
This is similar to what the ballisticians @ Hornady were saying in their podcast too, and it makes good sense. Zero your rifle for its intended purpose. If you're hunting, shooting 3 shot groups might be far more than enough, as realistically you'll likely never fire more than 3 at a given animal. Zero your optic to that group and you're set.
In your competition rig, like you say - find a good load, shoot enough of that load so that you have some legitimate data to show you how well it groups, MAX, MIN, AVG etc. and then zero for the centre of that group. You're off to the races and ready to shoot. Guns that shoot 0.15" all day are hilarious - outside of BR (and even then) the statistical likelihood of a gun shooting that well all the time is, as you say, not common.
If you shoot several of those, it’ll be good enough for that purpose. It’s highly unlikely all of a sudden those few 3-shot groups were all 8” away from the ‘usual’ poa.I suspect that you may not be understanding about statistics, if you think 3 shots tells you where your hunting rifle is sighted for - is the whole point that each shot has variation - you want to be sighted in where there is the least variation for future shots - and a 3 shot group does not tell you that.
I suspect that you may not be understanding about statistics, if you think 3 shots tells you where your hunting rifle is sighted for - is the whole point that each shot has variation - you want to be sighted in where there is the least variation for future shots - and a 3 shot group does not tell you that.
Hi there, sorry if it has been answered before but what is the accepted group size for MOA "claims", 3, 5 or 10? Thank you
I love how you take your nonsense elsewhere in the forum for some schooling. Brilliant.
https://www.canadiangunnutz.com/for...-Sterling-R18-MKII-Worth-The-Extra-Cost/page3
I asked the experts, not some wannabe. Don't take this as offense.