Re: Cooper Montana Varminter
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: ToddM</div><div class="ubbcode-body">
Not to be too confrontational it's obviously a good shooting rifle, and I'd say this to anyone with any gun... you can call it a proven 1/3 MOA rifle if you want, but show me 5 groups of 5 that average less than .33 and we'll talk, two groups with one having a fowler shot pushing the group to 1" doesn't prove a rifle to me, or even clean the snipers hide 1/2" dot target, that should be candy for a 1/3 MOA rifle.
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Agreed on the 5X5, disagree on the Sniper's Hide 1/2" dot target. 5 5-shot groups is a good number of groups on the same page. It is pretty possible to have a lucky group or two that is tight. Even a 5-shot group. I have plenty of 5-shot group targets that would be a heck of a lot better if I just stopped at the second group. 5 groups... well... it is difficult to get lucky on 25 consecutive shots.
Now the Sniper's Hide Practical Tactical is a completely different exercise that is intended to test the shooter, not the gun. With groups, it is easy enough to set up your NPA and drill 5 shots without even changing cheek weld... And then measure how far apart the shots are from each other, not necessarily their placement on the target. That is a pretty good test of the rifle, not such a great test of the shooter. If you have a 4-shot magazine, you can drill those shots without a shift in wind, even.
The whole point of the Sniper's Hide Practical Tactical Target is to test the shooter as opposed to the rifle... You are measuring accuracy, not precision. That exercise forces you to change position 14 times... while you can blame the rifle a bit for being off, the exercise is more difficult for the shooter than the rifle. And boy is it difficult and humbling. It is closer to a "real world" experience, and is much better practice than shooting groups.
As to Cooper, I am not upset that they use a vice to hold the gun in place for the groups... that is not deceptive... it tests how good the rifle is without taking into account the shooter, which is what an accuracy guarantee should be. BUT, I do think it is deceptive to say that you guarantee a 3-shot group at 100 yards and then provide a test target shot at a much closer range and not mention how far the group was shot (while including completely extraneous / irrelevant information like the scope magnification). I saw those one-shot groups, and I assumed they were shot at 100 yards.
it is a reasonable point that the test target should come out to the guarantee, but come on, we tend to expect rifles to perform better than the guarantees. So when you present me with a .25" target, I am going to think I got one of the really good ones... sort of a marketing scam. But kudos to them for actually test firing. Many, many custom shops don't even test-fire their guns. Makes you wonder how they back up their guarantee...