Yep.
You can say your gun does 0.5moa groups. BUT... Even that does not mean the gun shoots 0.5moa!! If someone were to say 5 shots is enough, why is it 5 then, why not 3?
The problem is that math term sample size has a real meaning - it means that data should have uniformity.
Is there anyone else here ready to present documented groups from their 1moa AR? (I bet that rifle does 1moa at 100 yds, so good enough for me) Because this topic hits me close, as I too have wondered their accuracy (read: precision) capacity for some time.
If people here have noticed, only one proof of 1moa AR has so far surfaced and even that was not owned by a hide member, but belongs to a member of a state rifle team. And it was small frame, not large frame, which invalidates it for this thread but is still interesting nonetheless.
Sure, attached are my a few groups of less than one MOA strings with the following setup:
LMT MWS 20" barrel, stock buffer tube/spring/buffer (used rifle, I am not the first owner)
Geissele SSA-E trigger
SiCo Omega 300
PRIME .308 ammo - FACTORY AMMO
paper was at 100m on a bat shit cold Wisconsin day
Scope while shooting was a 5-25x56 BEAST
To answer the OP's intial question...Yes.
I'm not sure what the goal of this thread is after reading all the posts, sub-moa, accurate and precise AR10s / large frame semi-autos exist. To me my pictured groups don't prove much, except that I now know the rifle's capabilities at 100m(with some left on the table too) and trust the rifle. I'm no sniper, I just trust my training, apply fundamentals and frickin love shooting, wish I could do it more but the semi auto is a known can opener for excuses. I really believe most modern day ar platforms are sub moa rifles, but the shooter is not. I've owned Seekins Sp10, JP LRP-07, multiple LMT MWS, LWRC REPR all shot very well with the LMT shooting the best when group sizes were compared.
These groups were from the first day of having the rifle, first 12 shots ever with the rifle after installing the new barrel that day. The smaller group is a 5 shot group when shooting slow and for group size, the star shaped group is a 7 shot group in a "rapid fire" style where it was quick cadence of: bang, trigger reset, bang, trigger reset, bang and so on 7 times.
These groups are not conversation pieces or framed on my wall, they're what I start with when I get a new rifle. Does it group well when I apply my skillset yes/no, if yes I move on to the next shooting string/distance/position/training agenda item, I don't dwell on it at and spend a ton of time at 100m. If no, I try to diagnose: was it me, is everything torqued down correctly, did things stay torqued down, etc.
This rifle is extremely accurate, at least for me, when deer season comes along like it did a few weeks ago, I throw the razor 1-6 on it and it gets the job done.
End of the day sure some rifles have manufacturer issues that effect accuracy but I believe there are many "sub-moa" semi-autos out there but probably fewer "sub-moa" semi-auto shooters.
Just because you have a V16 Cadillac doesn't mean you'll win the race, you have to be able to drive it too.