Re: 1500 Yard 0.25 MOA Confidence Poll
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: CoryT</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Graham, tell him I'll give him $50 for that rifle.
You know, if you are just going to shoot in the same hole, why bother to shoot again?
Eddy, even if you go to a machine rest, does the rifle AVERAGE 1/4 MOA, including ALL the groups? As I've said, every rifle is 1/4 MOA CAPABLE, if you shoot enough. It's not a 1/4 MOA rifle just because it turned in a couple of 1/4" 100 yard 3 shot groups. If you took every group you ever shot with it, then averaged the group size and it was 1/4, then fine, I'd call it a 1/4 MOA rifle.
I just did a Foreign Weapons class last week and put 5 shots from a ragged out PSL into a 2" group at 400 yards using surplus Yugo MG ball, does that mean I've got a 1/2 MOA PSL? Hardly, I just won the lottery that day on where the bullets landed. I could not do that again on the best day I ever had, so it counts for nothing. Oh, and it was the best five out of 10 shots, 1 of which was entirely off the paper. Not all that impressive now that I read it. </div></div>
I understand what your saying Cory, I just disagree with you. Sure you get groups that are anomalies, once in a while. But can you do it on any given day, loading at the bench. I say loading at the bench because there are days where changing enviromentals can knock your load out of its node and turn a .09 rifle into a .5 rifle in just a few hours.
Your definition takes into account siad load variability, which is beyond the capability of the gun. I say that if on any given day if you can work a load and make that rifle shoot shoot 1/4 MOA groups it is a 1/4 MOA rifle. For instance if I can take my BR rifle out shoot a .5 group, add a couple clicks of powder and then shoot 5 .25 5 shot groups it is a 1/4 MOA rifle. BTW shooting 5 .25 inch groups is damn near impossible for me at a BR match.
Here is what your definition is saying, " this is a 1/4 MOA rifle, with a 1/4 MOA load, being shot in 1/4 MOA conditions, by a 1/4 MOA shooter, every day, day in and day out, regardless." I just think it is a BS definition.
If every rifle is 1/4 MOA capable I got a few I would like you to work a load up for and shoot just one 1/4 MOA group.
Maybe gun builders and shooting instructors need a different definition. I do not know many builders who will advertise a 1/4 MOA guarantee by your definition. You are the first person who has ever given me that alternative definition. Is that one you came up with on your own, or is that a consensus here on the hide? If it is a hard and fast definition here I am gonna have to buy some of the 1/2 inch rifles I see advertised for sale here. Because if they are half inch rifles by your definition then they gotta be shooting a bunch of zeros to offset the .7 and .8s they are gonna shoot when the load goes away.