I care.
People uninitiated in statistics and data analysis are doing those things in everyday life based on traditions established eons ago by similarly uninitiated people.
Finally, we get sophisticated enough that professionals in the fields of stats and data analysis are bringing them to bear on our discipline which, insomuch as it involves measurement, is inextricably linked to stats, and "nobody cares"?
Sounds foolish to me, but to each his own.
Than*
You’re*
I didn’t take 30 anything for me to realize this load was a winner. Not 30 shots. Not thirty samples. And since then, it lines up with my ballistic calculator 100% and has yet to fail to put a first round shot on target out to a mile, in a 6BR.
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Here’s another load developed in less than 30 samples that I have extreme confidence in. Different gun. Different components. Different cartridge. 6.5Creed.
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Those who say it cannot be done, should not interfere with those who are doing.
I have defintely had groups that looked like they were ok (sub MOA) during load development but after deciding on that load discovered further down the track that they weren't as good as I expected and must've gottten "lucky" during development.
But every time this has happened it's been were the groups were all pretty marginal to begin with.
For example my crappy 223 load I thought was around .75 MOA but in reality it's nearer to 1 MOA.
Would 30 round groups have let me know the true group size early on, YES.
Would they have helped me find that .75 MOA group I was looking for, probably not, I'm guessing all the groups would've been shite.
In Tokays above example he may haven gottten lucky with that .16 MOA group, but what is the likelihood that you were so lucky that it's actually a 1 MOA load? Pretty unlikely, especially if the groups before and after are a similar size, and the ES is good.
Perhaps all you stastically wizards could tell us the probability of shooting a .16 MOA group from a 1 MOA load?
In reality once you have done a charge test, you will load up a bunch of rounds at the choosen charge weight to verify that it is good at 100yards, then go and verify it at longer distance. By the time you are done with this process you've shot 30 odd rounds and gotten confirmation at distance as well, as well as verify the DOPE at distance.
So whilst 30 @ 100yards might be the minimum amount to be statisically certain that you know what your group size is, in reality you can find the same information in a far more productive way, without wasting reloading components.
With 22lr, yeah I'm going to fire the whole box when ammo testing as it's very easy to cherry pick groups with 22lr (hence the 6x5 threads) and the amount of variabiltiy in 22lr ammo is often painful.