Many of us on the Rimfire forum enjoy shooting the 6x5 challenge at 50/100/200yds. Me included. My previous best at 50yds was:
Average = 0.212" 0.405 MOA
Best = 0.147" 0.281 MOA
Shot with my trusty old bone stock Remington 540XR tgt rifle with 36x Sightron scope. Those are good numbers for any rifle. But being a confirmed accuracy addict, I was seeking more, lol. Enter Mike Ezell, of Ezell custom rifles in Auburn, KY. Mike has developed what he calls a PDT, or Particle Dampened Tuner. I do not know Mike other than speaking to him on the phone and am in no way associated with his business but I did know a thing or two about harmonic dampening of steel structures and had an interest in bbl tuners having seen the old Harrells tuners in action at various benchrest matches. What he described is a barrel tunner that contains particles of tungsten powder in tubes surrounding the bore and these help to dampen and broaden the node in the harmonic vibrations of the barrel. Regular tuners do this but the particles in theory were proving to widen the sweet spot and enable a tuner equipped rifle to not only shoot better but to shoot well with a range of ammo. I swallowed that story and ordered one about a month ago. Well yesterday, it arrived. I dropped all my Honey-Do's and installed it to my Purdy number (google Purdy Prescription or PRx for details), and raced off to the range to test the wonder weapon.
Range Report: Short answer is the PDT contains magic pixy dust that turns good rifles into amazing rifles and average ammo into Olympic grade match ammo. Wow, Wow, Wow!
Longer answer is this. I think I can legitimately claim that my rifle which was already shooting in the 2's at 50yds on a perfect day with one great lot of Lapua ammo, will now shoot in the 1's, even on a less than perfect day and will do it with several different ammo lots. I am pleased and really only scratched the surface. I set out shooting 5 shot groups at a USBR tgt from a two piece rest off of the bench at 50yds. After each group, I adjusted the tuner by two numbers and repeated the process. I was using Wolf Match Extra not wanting to burn up my good Lapua while warming up the bbl and clicking thru a range of settings. I was looking for the settings that caused the groups to tighten up in the vertical. It was windy and normally, too windy for me to bother to shoot. I aimed directly at the center dot of the tgt every time and did nothing to adjust for the wind or attempt to improve a group by holding off. This hurt the overall group sizes a little and raised the average group size. But what I was getting is a pattern, where the groups would shrink and then expand again as the rifle hit a node and then adjusted away from it. See the tgt pics posted below. I went from 30 down to 8. At this point, I ran out of Wolf and then switched to SK Std + ammo. The results to that point showed that set on 16 was getting the best results with a group of 0.165". So, I clicked the tuner back to 16 and repeated the group using the SK ammo. The result was a 0.206" group for five shots all in a nice little cloverleaf.
At this stage I wanted to adjust on both sides of this good setting to see if it improved. Clicking to 16.5 and 17 caused the groups to open up a little, so I clicked down to 15.5 and then 15. They opened up even more with vertical stringing but 4 of the 5 shots were all in one hole. With that in mind, I tried 16.25 and 15.75. Both of these settings got good results with groups of 0.292" and 0.135" respectively. Clearly somewhere between 16 and 15.75 seemed to be the sweet spot. Now I was out of SK ammo but was ready to switch to my Lapua Center X ammo and run some more groups. The first group was set at 15.75 and all four of the first shots hit exactly in the same hole with one flying high by about 1/4". Interesting. We stopped for 5 min to allow guys at the range to post tgts and when I resumed the cold bore caused the groups with setting of 16 to open up. But the Remington always does this after a break, so I repeated the same group with setting of 16 and was rewarded with a group that is the best ever for this rifle. It measured 0.097" center to center. Wow! I shot three more groups at that setting all in a row with the Lapua ammo but they were all in the twos with lots of horizontal dispersion as the wind had now picked up. The vertical dispersion was almost non-existent indicating that the tuner was still doing its job.
Some stats: I shot six groups with the PDT tuner at a setting of 16.0 and when I measured them, they averaged 0.199" with a best group of 0.097". That would be tops in the 6x5 challenge but they were not all shot in a row and were shot with three different Lapua ammo products (Wolf MX, SK Std+ and CX). So, I will not submit them as a legitimate series of groups. But the results on a less than perfect day were still impressive. I also measured the last six groups fired. These averaged 0.213" which equaled my best every run on a perfect day with zero wind. Plus the best group was that 0.097" which is a personal best with this rifle. I believe that if I sat down and shot groups on a perfect day with my focus on making the group as small as possible and adjusting for the wind with each shot, I can consistently get this rifle into the 10's at 50yds. I might still need to tweak the tuner a little bit as well. I also want to test it with Eley ammo since I have a bunch of it on hand.
Final summary: While the numbers indicate a small improvement, the most telling thing is the way the rifle shot on a day that was far from perfect and how well the rifle shot when dialed into a sweet spot. Out of 25 groups fired, I had 16 where all the holes were touching and nine that were smaller than 1/4 inch. All while NOT attempting to adjust for wind or mistakes I may have made on each group. And I was not being particularly careful. I was firing about one round every 20 seconds and as soon as each round was loaded, I aimed and sent it down range. At least 12 of the 25 groups had all but one round in a single itty bitty hole and only the one stray in some of those opened it up further. And in most cases, those stray shots were due to wind shifts that I intentionally did not adjust for. The results from this first test of the PDT are amazing and I am very pleased with it. Again, I have no association with Ezell or his business. I am just a happy customer. Now I want to go shoot a match to see how it does there. Need to shoot Justin's dot shoot again as well or take it out to 100yds. Will wait for a calm day for that.
Irish
Average = 0.212" 0.405 MOA
Best = 0.147" 0.281 MOA
Shot with my trusty old bone stock Remington 540XR tgt rifle with 36x Sightron scope. Those are good numbers for any rifle. But being a confirmed accuracy addict, I was seeking more, lol. Enter Mike Ezell, of Ezell custom rifles in Auburn, KY. Mike has developed what he calls a PDT, or Particle Dampened Tuner. I do not know Mike other than speaking to him on the phone and am in no way associated with his business but I did know a thing or two about harmonic dampening of steel structures and had an interest in bbl tuners having seen the old Harrells tuners in action at various benchrest matches. What he described is a barrel tunner that contains particles of tungsten powder in tubes surrounding the bore and these help to dampen and broaden the node in the harmonic vibrations of the barrel. Regular tuners do this but the particles in theory were proving to widen the sweet spot and enable a tuner equipped rifle to not only shoot better but to shoot well with a range of ammo. I swallowed that story and ordered one about a month ago. Well yesterday, it arrived. I dropped all my Honey-Do's and installed it to my Purdy number (google Purdy Prescription or PRx for details), and raced off to the range to test the wonder weapon.
Range Report: Short answer is the PDT contains magic pixy dust that turns good rifles into amazing rifles and average ammo into Olympic grade match ammo. Wow, Wow, Wow!
Longer answer is this. I think I can legitimately claim that my rifle which was already shooting in the 2's at 50yds on a perfect day with one great lot of Lapua ammo, will now shoot in the 1's, even on a less than perfect day and will do it with several different ammo lots. I am pleased and really only scratched the surface. I set out shooting 5 shot groups at a USBR tgt from a two piece rest off of the bench at 50yds. After each group, I adjusted the tuner by two numbers and repeated the process. I was using Wolf Match Extra not wanting to burn up my good Lapua while warming up the bbl and clicking thru a range of settings. I was looking for the settings that caused the groups to tighten up in the vertical. It was windy and normally, too windy for me to bother to shoot. I aimed directly at the center dot of the tgt every time and did nothing to adjust for the wind or attempt to improve a group by holding off. This hurt the overall group sizes a little and raised the average group size. But what I was getting is a pattern, where the groups would shrink and then expand again as the rifle hit a node and then adjusted away from it. See the tgt pics posted below. I went from 30 down to 8. At this point, I ran out of Wolf and then switched to SK Std + ammo. The results to that point showed that set on 16 was getting the best results with a group of 0.165". So, I clicked the tuner back to 16 and repeated the group using the SK ammo. The result was a 0.206" group for five shots all in a nice little cloverleaf.
At this stage I wanted to adjust on both sides of this good setting to see if it improved. Clicking to 16.5 and 17 caused the groups to open up a little, so I clicked down to 15.5 and then 15. They opened up even more with vertical stringing but 4 of the 5 shots were all in one hole. With that in mind, I tried 16.25 and 15.75. Both of these settings got good results with groups of 0.292" and 0.135" respectively. Clearly somewhere between 16 and 15.75 seemed to be the sweet spot. Now I was out of SK ammo but was ready to switch to my Lapua Center X ammo and run some more groups. The first group was set at 15.75 and all four of the first shots hit exactly in the same hole with one flying high by about 1/4". Interesting. We stopped for 5 min to allow guys at the range to post tgts and when I resumed the cold bore caused the groups with setting of 16 to open up. But the Remington always does this after a break, so I repeated the same group with setting of 16 and was rewarded with a group that is the best ever for this rifle. It measured 0.097" center to center. Wow! I shot three more groups at that setting all in a row with the Lapua ammo but they were all in the twos with lots of horizontal dispersion as the wind had now picked up. The vertical dispersion was almost non-existent indicating that the tuner was still doing its job.
Some stats: I shot six groups with the PDT tuner at a setting of 16.0 and when I measured them, they averaged 0.199" with a best group of 0.097". That would be tops in the 6x5 challenge but they were not all shot in a row and were shot with three different Lapua ammo products (Wolf MX, SK Std+ and CX). So, I will not submit them as a legitimate series of groups. But the results on a less than perfect day were still impressive. I also measured the last six groups fired. These averaged 0.213" which equaled my best every run on a perfect day with zero wind. Plus the best group was that 0.097" which is a personal best with this rifle. I believe that if I sat down and shot groups on a perfect day with my focus on making the group as small as possible and adjusting for the wind with each shot, I can consistently get this rifle into the 10's at 50yds. I might still need to tweak the tuner a little bit as well. I also want to test it with Eley ammo since I have a bunch of it on hand.
Final summary: While the numbers indicate a small improvement, the most telling thing is the way the rifle shot on a day that was far from perfect and how well the rifle shot when dialed into a sweet spot. Out of 25 groups fired, I had 16 where all the holes were touching and nine that were smaller than 1/4 inch. All while NOT attempting to adjust for wind or mistakes I may have made on each group. And I was not being particularly careful. I was firing about one round every 20 seconds and as soon as each round was loaded, I aimed and sent it down range. At least 12 of the 25 groups had all but one round in a single itty bitty hole and only the one stray in some of those opened it up further. And in most cases, those stray shots were due to wind shifts that I intentionally did not adjust for. The results from this first test of the PDT are amazing and I am very pleased with it. Again, I have no association with Ezell or his business. I am just a happy customer. Now I want to go shoot a match to see how it does there. Need to shoot Justin's dot shoot again as well or take it out to 100yds. Will wait for a calm day for that.
Irish