Re: Ammo Accuracy
I rough zero and shoot a group at 100yd, then move out to 200 for definitive testing. The change in zero is recorded and retained for comparison against ballistic spreadsheet info.
These days I seldom shoot beyond 200 yd and also seldom travel outside a one-hour travel radius. That's what's available to me, and going further could be unwise in light of both my and my Wife's medical issues. Each of us needs to able to reach and support the other in a reasonable duration.
I will generally shoot several FV200 target COFs and if the individual targets score in the high 40's I'm very pleased. The targets are 5/V scoring targets with a 1" V-ring, 2" 5-Ring, and 4" 4-Ring. The COF places ten rounds on each target. For my own practical purposes, that's satisfactory.
The Pejsa Spreadsheet I use will print a stock table (drop/drift chart) at selected distance increments, on out to the distance where the bullet goes subsonic. I have never been a disciple of the computed POI. For my purposes it serves OK for getting On Paper at known distances, and for more precision than that, I choose to refine my zero using observed impacts. Usually, the chart can get me to a reasonable starting point.
Rob's experience with extending known results out to greater distances essentially parallels mine.
Theoretically, dispersion follows a cone projection. In a perfect world that would be a reliable concept, but in practice, it's not so simple.
Like the second law of thermodynamics implies, nature favors disorder over order, and projections become less reliable as distances increase.
Put more simply, a 1/2MOA rifle at 100yd can be relied upon for about 2MOA of accuracy at 1000yd, in practical terms. That's actually pretty good performance in the real world, and in prectical terms, if I can get all my rounds into the 4-Ring on the FV200 target at 200, I'm shooting a practical 2MOA, and I'm quite happy enough. Last W/E, in FV200 comp, all but 1 of 40 rounds for score stayed inside the 4" circle at 200yd.
Getting all my rounds into 2MOA and half of those into 1MOA is gonna allow me to defeat pretty much any target I'm likely to want to defeat.
Refining accuracy beyond such standards is not productive, IMHO. My lifestyle, occupation, and pursuits do not require more accuracy. Obtaining such requires more distraction than I choose to allow from the primary task of maintaining and employing my accuracy assets in what I consider a satisfactory manner.
Many will undoubtedly disagree with such a standard, and I respect that.
Greg