I posted earlier thread about Dracos 22" Creedmoor barrel but I've been feeling like I never gave it a fair shake for you guys. I tested only two factory ammo types and only a small set of handloads (ELDM) with Varget, not to mention mixed lots of Hornady brass with at least 6-7 firings. That said, I settled on doing a new test after the barrel has broken in (900 rounds+ so far) and testing a larger variety of bullets. Here is the test:
Another point: Remember that this test represents 30 different loads (6 bullets X 5 charges each) and of all the groups, 30 of 30 four-shot groups were sub-MOA and 20 were sub .75 MOA, all while shooting round robin, breaking cheekweld, rebuilding NPA and starting new between each volley of 5 rounds. Here is another breakdown by # of groups by size:
Does it maintain sub-MOA? Definitely.
Sub three quarter MOA? Yes.
Sub 2/3 MOA? With the right load, most likely.
Sub Half? Possibly. With a better shooter, almost certainly a sub-half MOA barrel.
As long as they continue to honor their warranty, I think this barrel system is a winner. It's consistent and has sped up considerably since new; 123 ELD's with different lot of H4350 started at 2870fps and ended up over 2950fps after about 150-200 rounds.
Hope you get some value from this and good shooting! Here are photos of the targets:
- Bullets tested:
- Berger 130 AR Hybrid,
- Hornady 123 ELDM,
- Lapua Scenar 123,
- Lapua Scenar 139,
- Sierra Matchking 123 HPBT,
- Sierra Tipped Matchking 130
- Virgin (unfired) Starline Brass 6.5 CM Large Rifle with CCI BR2 Primers. Seating depth set to 2.808" OAL for all rounds. Brass was first resized with RCBS full length, then trimmed/chamfered/deburred to 1.910" before loading.
- Rifle: Savage MSR10 Hunter, Hyperfire Trigger, Nightforce ATACR 4-16x, factory everything else (except barrel of course). Approx. 800 rounds through barrel prior to testing. Barrel scrubbed completely bare/no copper this morning prior to test (separate video/post coming on this topic)
- 125 rounds in a single session (similar to PRS/Match round count): 5 foulers/sighters to start then 6 separate OCW Tests with about 15 minutes between each 20 round string (including shooting the string). Each OCW was fired in Round Robin fashion (low to high, high to low, middle to middle, then last was random) so heat was averaged out over all charge levels.
- Field Condition shooting: All rounds fired prone with rear bean bag, shooting mat and Atlas bipod.
- Environment Conditions: Temp 45 degrees, 6-10 mph wind was from 6-7 o'clock on a fairly shielded 100 yard range.
- Sequence of Fire:
- 123 ELDM - Smallest Group: .495 MOA, Avg: .657 MOA, Avg to Center: .237 MOA
- 130 AR Hybrid - Smallest Group: .585 MOA, Avg: .666 MOA, Avg to Center: .258 MOA
- 123 SMK - Smallest: .597 MOA, Avg: .691 MOA, Avg to Center: .260 MOA
- 139 Scenar - Smallest: .641 MOA**, Avg: .855 MOA, Avg to Center: .365 MOA
- 130 TMK - Smallest: .379 MOA, Avg: .671 MOA, Avg to Center: .285 MOA
- 123 Scenar - Smallest: .582 MOA, Avg: .713 MOA, Avg to Center: .265 MOA
Another point: Remember that this test represents 30 different loads (6 bullets X 5 charges each) and of all the groups, 30 of 30 four-shot groups were sub-MOA and 20 were sub .75 MOA, all while shooting round robin, breaking cheekweld, rebuilding NPA and starting new between each volley of 5 rounds. Here is another breakdown by # of groups by size:
- Out of 30 total groups:
- 2 Groups less than .5 MOA (130 TMK and 123 ELDM)
- 18 Groups Between .5MOA and .749 MOA
- 10 Groups between .750 and .999 MOA
- 0 Groups at or over 1MOA
Does it maintain sub-MOA? Definitely.
Sub three quarter MOA? Yes.
Sub 2/3 MOA? With the right load, most likely.
Sub Half? Possibly. With a better shooter, almost certainly a sub-half MOA barrel.
As long as they continue to honor their warranty, I think this barrel system is a winner. It's consistent and has sped up considerably since new; 123 ELD's with different lot of H4350 started at 2870fps and ended up over 2950fps after about 150-200 rounds.
Hope you get some value from this and good shooting! Here are photos of the targets:
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