Have already read the topics about cold bore shots and whether or not it's the firearm or the shooter, so with that said...
I have noticed on the last three or four range days, I have gone to the range just to do a 10 shot dot drill with the .308, do some work with the .22, and go home. Consistently, the cold bore shots with my .308 whether or not I shoot it first or after practice with the .22 are ~2.75MOA high. At 100, 200, and 340 yards, the distance from the cold bore shot to the center of the rest of the group, or the pattern of the dot drills at 100 and 200, always tend to vary between 2.75 and 3 MOA high.
I'm not going to say whether its the platform or the shooter. All I'm wondering is that if it's the platform, can I count on a cold bore shot being 2.75MOA high at longer ranges? And if it's the shooter, is there any general direction I can take to bring the cold bore shot down?
Thanks for any input, and have a good one!
-Travis
I have noticed on the last three or four range days, I have gone to the range just to do a 10 shot dot drill with the .308, do some work with the .22, and go home. Consistently, the cold bore shots with my .308 whether or not I shoot it first or after practice with the .22 are ~2.75MOA high. At 100, 200, and 340 yards, the distance from the cold bore shot to the center of the rest of the group, or the pattern of the dot drills at 100 and 200, always tend to vary between 2.75 and 3 MOA high.
I'm not going to say whether its the platform or the shooter. All I'm wondering is that if it's the platform, can I count on a cold bore shot being 2.75MOA high at longer ranges? And if it's the shooter, is there any general direction I can take to bring the cold bore shot down?
Thanks for any input, and have a good one!
-Travis