Nobody shoots 22Lr .3-.4 at 100 yds [ETA- "consistently"] that's honestly just BS.3-.4 at 100 yards consistently enough to say that’s how it shoots would be absolutely exceptional in my book. Most guys struggle to average that in a centerfire
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Join contest SubscribeNobody shoots 22Lr .3-.4 at 100 yds [ETA- "consistently"] that's honestly just BS.3-.4 at 100 yards consistently enough to say that’s how it shoots would be absolutely exceptional in my book. Most guys struggle to average that in a centerfire
I assumed we’re talking inches or MOA. So at 100 yards it be nearly the same if that’s the caseYou know, Are we talking .x as in inches or .x as in .1 mil?
I thought we were in mils, yeah, bull if inches.
So 1.08-1.44" is "doable"
I totally agree. My most consistent average at 100 is .70, I know some that would beat that but our club champ can get to .64 regularly in his 1 piece rest.Nobody shoots 22Lr .3-.4 at 100 yds [ETA- "consistently"] that's honestly just BS
I am from a centerfire long range benchrest background. In centerfire we shoot 5 shot groups with 5 group AGG. for results. I shot 3 IBS world records in 600yds. I was the first to shoot below 1" with a 0.749" Light gun record. Not bragging, just to let guys know, I know what I am doing.We all want that. My position on 10 shots is proving the rifle, the rest is the mercy of the ammo. Actually 5 is all I need to prove my work.
I can only answer this for myself. I shoot F Class for score ... 40 shots at 50 yards. ARA is 25 shots for score. So we know what size the composite 40 or 25 shot group has to be in order not to drop points. If ones goal is small groups go with five per group. You'll get more 'good' groups that way. If your goal is accuracy then shot for score and keep track of your composite group size requirements for your discipline.I am asking why in rimfire, how did we get to groups 10, 20, 50 shots? David this question is not so much for you , but for the group.
I would think shooting 10 shots or more per group indoors with no conditions is more about proving the ammo than the rifle.We all want that. My position on 10 shots is proving the rifle, the rest is the mercy of the ammo. Actually 5 is all I need to prove my work.
Yep!!I can only answer this for myself. I shoot F Class for score ... 40 shots at 50 yards. ARA is 25 shots for score. So we know what size the composite 40 or 25 shot group has to be in order not to drop points. If ones goal is small groups go with five per group. You'll get more 'good' groups that way. If your goal is accuracy then shot for score and keep track of your composite group size requirements for your discipline.
We’ve been through this lol….. 5 shot groups vary in quite a bit. What some people say is a flyer is just a round within the actual dispersion population. This is why you can’t trust doing tuner testing or lot testing or even setting a zero with just 5 shots. Unless of course you overlay multiple groups to a larger aggregate. My guns that average in the low .3s at 50 will print 5 shot groups ranging from a ~.15 to a ~.45.I am from a centerfire long range benchrest background. In centerfire we shoot 5 shot groups with 5 group AGG. for results. I shot 3 IBS world records in 600yds. I was the first to shoot below 1" with a 0.749" Light gun record. Not bragging, just to let guys know, I know what I am doing.
I started shooting Rimfire long range about 5 years ago. I use the same 5 shot groups aggs for testing. I have been jumped on about 5 shot groups, not being enough rounds for testing. I'm in no way saying 10 shot or more are not a good way to test, it's not for me.
David I know what you are trying to do, with your 10 shot groups at a test range, where you have no conditions, or shooter error. You are just testing the gun, with each ammo. I know the ammo is our limit.
I am asking why in rimfire, how did we get to groups 10, 20, 50 shots? David this question is not so much for you , but for the group. Rimfire is a BEAST compared centerfire. Gun handling is the main issue in opening group, any inconsistency will change the group. Wind that you can not feel can open groups. Will this effect a 10 or 20 groups more or not. For these reasons alone, is why i shoot 5 shot groups.
Are we expecting too much from a round that will walk around the bullseye all day long, but still shooting great groups. And can shoot great in the morning and so so in the afternoon of the same day. Then the dropouts at long range. Making you say what the hell was that. Sometimes you just can't tell what the next round is going to do. Rimfire is a Beast, but I love it. I sold my centerfire and got more rimfires.
David keep up the good work, you guns are great.
There is a good explanation of group size analysis with regard to the number of shots in a group here http://the-long-family.com/group_size_analysis.htmI am asking why in rimfire, how did we get to groups 10, 20, 50 shots?
I don't just shoot a 5 shot group, I shoot many. You say your gun averages in the low .3's at 50 yds and 5 shot ranging .15" to .45" . Average is an AGG. Just like I am doing. Now that is funny.We’ve been through this lol….. 5 shot groups vary in quite a bit. What some people say is a flyer is just a round within the actual dispersion population. This is why you can’t trust doing tuner testing or lot testing or even setting a zero with just 5 shots. Unless of course you overlay multiple groups to a larger aggregate. My guns that average in the low .3s at 50 will print 5 shot groups ranging from a ~.15 to a ~.45.
Would be exceptional except it doesn't exist in the real world. Double that group size at 100 consistently from a bipod/bag is exceptional IMO, and I'm thrilled when I find a lot that regularly shoots .7/.8 @ 100..3-.4 at 100 yards consistently enough to say that’s how it shoots would be absolutely exceptional in my book. Most guys struggle to average that in a centerfire
I'm not invalidating your analysis. I said you are not shooting a 25 shot group, you shooting your card. You have to hold for your conditions. your analysis is good. That is the score shooting. I'm a long range steel shooter I hold for wind all the time. I go for hit %I don't see how that invalidates my group analysis. I of course don't hold center for every shot ... that would be a weather report, not an assessment of system precision and accuracy.
Those are some exceptional ES/SD numbers over long shot strings, and from half dozen different rifles to boot. Please PM the name of your barrel maker so I can have a few spun up.I expect my match rifles to shoot .2mil vertical groups at 200 yards. I have achieved that with factory guns (two different B14Rs, and one CZ 457 MTR), an Anschutz, two Rimxs with prefit barrels and even two Kidd 10/22s. If I have tested a rifle with my proven ammo - I buy a lot when I find a lot one of my guns likes - and that gun won’t shoot any of the good stuff well, I move it along.
One of the biggest challenges I have worked to deal with is the first round flier / cold bore shot. I’m sure the keyboard warriors would pick apart my testing, so I will just say if you don’t do anything to address that - via bore cap or some other method - you are leaving that first round up to chance.
What I’m saying is - instead of focusing on group size, why don’t we look at rifles that can deliver a first round that is within the SD of a string, versus 2-3x that SD? Just a thought.
Oh, and here is a snapshot of my chrono data that I track. I shoot a lot of eley for historical reasons. But that random lot of Lapua long range was amazing. It was sold out when I realized how awesome it was, or I would have bought a few cases of it!
What is funny is that you can’t see the point or don’t understand basic stats lol. Average is not the same as Agg. Keep drinking the koolaid lolI don't just shoot a 5 shot group, I shoot many. You say your gun averages in the low .3's at 50 yds and 5 shot ranging .15" to .45" . Average is an AGG. Just like I am doing. Now that is funny.
I'm a long range steel shooter, I zero at 50 yds, get my ES and Tune for my vertical at 200yds and 300yds and my dope down range, and shoot steel.
This is pretty typical of my rifle with Lapua SLR.Let’s see some of these 1.5” groups at 200. Definitely doable but not regularly. Certainly not the majority of the time even with good conditions. More like 2moa at 200.
You're not missing anything.This is just me not being that educated at max accuracy at 100
At 200yrds I am closer to 2”” (On a good day) with SLR.This is pretty typical of my rifle with Lapua SLR.
Not sure why the photo didn’t save.This is pretty typical of my rifle with Lapua SLR.
Average is self explanatory. But say you shoot 5 groups of 5. You may have an average group size of .3. But the total 25shot group size (agg) is say a .5. You’d overlay all 25shots to make one group. I do apologize because aggregate may not technically be the right term as agg means the total sum of a dataset I believe. I’ve heard it called agg, composite, and total group size…. Anyway, I encourage you to shoot 5 or 6 groups and use an app to find the x,y of each shot in relation to the POA. You can use excel to calculate the total group size. This is another reason why I call Bs on the toooner tests I’ve seen.Average is the total of your groups divided by the # of groups. In shooting an AGG is the total of your groups divided by the # of groups. Maybe I'm not shooting AGG's, I must be averaging my group, just like you. You need to explain how you came uo with your Average, and how that is different from a AGG.
I use the SD X and SD Y to confirm my tuner settings. If wind conditions are reasonably light SD X and SD Y will be approximately equal with a good tune. At least nearer equal than untuned. Again these are 40 shot data sets. I assume this addresses your concern.This is another reason why I call Bs on the toooner tests I’ve seen.
For a retard, would you please explain the above?I use the SD X and SD Y to confirm my tuner settings. If wind conditions are reasonably light SD X and SD Y will be approximately equal with a good tune. At least nearer equal than untuned. Again these are 40 shot data sets. I assume this addresses your concern.
It is enlightening to look at the difference between SD X and SD Y and then calculate the SD MV that it would take to create it. That can be compared to the chrono SD MV.
But in the end it still always comes down to missed wind calls.
40 shots per tuner setting?I use the SD X and SD Y to confirm my tuner settings. If wind conditions are reasonably light SD X and SD Y will be approximately equal with a good tune. At least nearer equal than untuned. Again these are 40 shot data sets. I assume this addresses your concern.
It is enlightening to look at the difference between SD X and SD Y and then calculate the SD MV that it would take to create it. That can be compared to the chrono SD MV.
But in the end it still always comes down to missed wind calls.
On my Harrells tuner that would be about $15 bucks times about 400 clicks= $$$$!40 shots per tuner setting?
Yeah no, I am at 5 shoots per setting until get to what seems like the best 2-3 then probably 15-20 to pick my spot.On my Harrells tuner that would be about $15 bucks times about 400 clicks= $$$$!
You are being way too hard on yourself but here goes ...For a retard, would you please explain the above?
50y sub .3 if mag fed, sub .2 if single loaded.What are the current accuracy expectations from a custom rifle group-wise at
50 Yards
100 yards
200 yards
Anything past would be great but we know the wind will play a huge role past 200.
I actually believe that current high end ammo is much better. They have improved bullet shape and the upper tier is more consistent. Back 20-30 years ago 100yrd accuracy was nowhere near as good as it is now.50y sub .3 if mag fed, sub .2 if single loaded.
100y and 200y, I don’t really have enough experience with non-factory rifles to speak definitely. My Anschutz barreled Sako has fired numerous .5 groups @ 100m, so I can only guess a factory Anschutz would perform that well or better. Drawing on that, I’d expect a bit better from a custom build. I haven’t done a lot of testing at 200, preferring to play at 300-400(shooting to the limits of the range I have access to), but have a 40XB that didn’t seem to have issues holding 1” at 200 with a bunch of us watching my friend driving it. Again, that’s perhaps an exceptional factory gun, I dunno, it came from the CMP. You already know my Bergara had no issues shooting sub 3” groups at 300y, and at least one fellow who didn’t believe it possible later posted his own groups far tighter from a custom Rim-X, so there’s that. Attitude affects how we shoot, and not everyone has a test bed to eliminate human input, thus we have good days and bad. I think if you believe something isn’t possible, you may not see the best results.
I believe ammo today isn’t what it was even 20 years ago, but I believe rifles are far better. If the ammo can catch back up, maybe the grand days of exceptional mid grade fodder will get more of us out there tripping triggers!
The OnTarget archery software was the cat's meow. Was very easy to make sight tapes out to 125yds.That's interesting, there used to be an archery software a couple decades ago called OnTarget, and it looks almost identical of what I remember and still strait out of a windows 95 interface![]()