I recently acquired an AI AXMC Long Action with conversion kits so I can shoot 300 win, 7mm Rem Mag, 260 Rem & 243 win. I have shot with all except the 243 win and the best groups I'm getting are around 1MOA.
It was set up by a bloke that runs a precision course here with Premier Tac Gen 2 XR 5-25 scope with Spuhr mount and LRA bipod. We bore sighted and levelled it.
On the course I just thought it was poor marksmanship on my part with the grouping at 100, but I gave the instructor a group and he did about the same as me. I'm only shooting factory ammunition as well.
After zeroing it at the course I put it in the safe for three months. Then when I took it out and shot it from the bench my zero was way high at 100 so I wasn't even on paper. So I dialled it back down onto the paper. I just thought maybe it got bumped and lost zero.
Three days later I take it to the range and the best group would be 1MOA but most around 3. The groups were all over the place and slightly high. So I go home and lower the zero. I tighten the barrel locking screw to the correct lbs per inch according to AI and the Sphur screws as according to the Sphur manual. I didn't think anything was loose now.
Anyhoo I go to the range today and it's still grouping s@$t, but not as high.
Any ideas what it could be????????
Now I have an AI AX 308, Sako Trg 22 & Tac Ops Tac51 and consistently shoot much better groups with them. The best groups being around 1/4 MOA.
There's nothing more embarrassing than having the best rifle set up at the range and being the worst shot.
As a side note the bloke running the course here was unsure how to zero a premier scope and slipped the drums despite me saying I didn't think it necessary. Could that have buggered the scope?
It was set up by a bloke that runs a precision course here with Premier Tac Gen 2 XR 5-25 scope with Spuhr mount and LRA bipod. We bore sighted and levelled it.
On the course I just thought it was poor marksmanship on my part with the grouping at 100, but I gave the instructor a group and he did about the same as me. I'm only shooting factory ammunition as well.
After zeroing it at the course I put it in the safe for three months. Then when I took it out and shot it from the bench my zero was way high at 100 so I wasn't even on paper. So I dialled it back down onto the paper. I just thought maybe it got bumped and lost zero.
Three days later I take it to the range and the best group would be 1MOA but most around 3. The groups were all over the place and slightly high. So I go home and lower the zero. I tighten the barrel locking screw to the correct lbs per inch according to AI and the Sphur screws as according to the Sphur manual. I didn't think anything was loose now.
Anyhoo I go to the range today and it's still grouping s@$t, but not as high.
Any ideas what it could be????????
Now I have an AI AX 308, Sako Trg 22 & Tac Ops Tac51 and consistently shoot much better groups with them. The best groups being around 1/4 MOA.
There's nothing more embarrassing than having the best rifle set up at the range and being the worst shot.
As a side note the bloke running the course here was unsure how to zero a premier scope and slipped the drums despite me saying I didn't think it necessary. Could that have buggered the scope?