I've been shooting frequently for several years now with the same rifle - a Remington 700 SPS 30-06 24". Over the past 3 years, I have tried many things, but I have never been able to get the rifle to group better than 1.5-2.0" at 100 yards. I have spent a lot of money on upgrades and ammo trying to find a setup that will give me ~1.0" or less at 100 yards, but I have never been able to get there. I was shooting the same size groups with the stock 7.5# rifle as I am now with still an AICS chassis, NF NXS scope with Larue mounts, and lightened x-mark 2.5# trigger. I have tried every type of factory ammo that I can get my hands on, and when I wasn't satisfied with that, I started reloading. Even though I enjoy the reloading process, it hasn't help shrink my group size one bit.
So my question for everyone is this: what can I do to get ~1.0" or smaller groups out of this rifle? The next potential steps in my mind are (1) having the rifle 'accurized' by a gunsmith, (2) replace the barrel with a non-sporting contour, (3) give up, sell the rifle, and start from scratch again with the scope / chassis on a new build.
I've attached two pics of typical groups. All shooting was done with a Caldwell front rest and a sand bag at the rear. I have spent a lot of time practicing good shooting form, dry-firing, etc, and I'd like to believe that I'm not the problem. When I have shot other guy's rifles at the range, I have usually done better than with my own rifle!
The wide-angle shoot-n-c pic is from ~1 month ago at 100 yards in light wind.
The second pic of four individual targets is at 200 yards in 12-15 mph wind. Bottom left group was used for scope / wind adjustment for a new load. The top right group was really nice, but unfortunately is the exception to the rule.
So my question for everyone is this: what can I do to get ~1.0" or smaller groups out of this rifle? The next potential steps in my mind are (1) having the rifle 'accurized' by a gunsmith, (2) replace the barrel with a non-sporting contour, (3) give up, sell the rifle, and start from scratch again with the scope / chassis on a new build.
I've attached two pics of typical groups. All shooting was done with a Caldwell front rest and a sand bag at the rear. I have spent a lot of time practicing good shooting form, dry-firing, etc, and I'd like to believe that I'm not the problem. When I have shot other guy's rifles at the range, I have usually done better than with my own rifle!
The wide-angle shoot-n-c pic is from ~1 month ago at 100 yards in light wind.
The second pic of four individual targets is at 200 yards in 12-15 mph wind. Bottom left group was used for scope / wind adjustment for a new load. The top right group was really nice, but unfortunately is the exception to the rule.