Lately I've become (re)interested in the peculiar behavior of some rifles to shoot <span style="font-style: italic">angularly</span> smaller groups at longer ranges. For example, a rifle that shoots 1" groups at 100 yards, and 1" or 1.5" groups at 200 yards.
There have been many long winded discussions about this weird behavior but none that have definitively locked it down (to my satisfaction anyway). One of my theories for how this can happen is incorrectly adjusted parallax, ie, aiming error. My 6-dof modeling doesn't reveal any flight mechanics that could produce the non-linear dispersion which is why I settled on an optical theory.
In the spirit of information gathering and problem solving that the internet makes so convenient, I'd like to ask anyone who's seen this behavior <span style="font-style: italic">systematically</span> occurring with their system to post with the following information:
Rifle, barrel, twist rate, bullet, scope, and the ranges that the non-constant dispersion was observed. An example would be:
Rem700 in .270 Winchester, factory barrel, 1:10" twist, Sierra 150 grain GameKings, Tasco 3-9 w/ no parallax adjustment. 1" groups at 100, 1.2" groups at 200.
If your scope does have adjustable parallax, please be honest about how careful you are to set it properly for each range you shoot. Note that turning the dial to the range you're shooting doesn't mean the parallax is adjusted correctly. Most of those range scales on scopes are not right and the side-focus ones are the worst. You have to turn the parallax adjustment while moving your eye across the eyepiece and seeing if there's apparent movement in the reticle. I have a scope that needs to be set at 250 yards to have the parallax be truly eliminated at 100 yards.
Thanks guys,
-Bryan
There have been many long winded discussions about this weird behavior but none that have definitively locked it down (to my satisfaction anyway). One of my theories for how this can happen is incorrectly adjusted parallax, ie, aiming error. My 6-dof modeling doesn't reveal any flight mechanics that could produce the non-linear dispersion which is why I settled on an optical theory.
In the spirit of information gathering and problem solving that the internet makes so convenient, I'd like to ask anyone who's seen this behavior <span style="font-style: italic">systematically</span> occurring with their system to post with the following information:
Rifle, barrel, twist rate, bullet, scope, and the ranges that the non-constant dispersion was observed. An example would be:
Rem700 in .270 Winchester, factory barrel, 1:10" twist, Sierra 150 grain GameKings, Tasco 3-9 w/ no parallax adjustment. 1" groups at 100, 1.2" groups at 200.
If your scope does have adjustable parallax, please be honest about how careful you are to set it properly for each range you shoot. Note that turning the dial to the range you're shooting doesn't mean the parallax is adjusted correctly. Most of those range scales on scopes are not right and the side-focus ones are the worst. You have to turn the parallax adjustment while moving your eye across the eyepiece and seeing if there's apparent movement in the reticle. I have a scope that needs to be set at 250 yards to have the parallax be truly eliminated at 100 yards.
Thanks guys,
-Bryan