Re: school me on the .243
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: 264Charlie</div><div class="ubbcode-body"> I asked what people are considering match accuracy? How is that a know it all?
I am saying a 243 with 2000 rounds fired in match conditions with match loads will not be competitive in the matches held out west. To be competitive you need a gun (and shooter) that can hold at least 1/2MOA of a bipod. Most of the 243 driven hard to keep up with the 260s are getting flyers at 1200 -1500.
Oh, I'm not driving my 243 hard at all: 2930 fps with 39gr H4350. So, that's not true either.
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Well Charlie, I shoot out in the windy west and I use a 243 every weekend at the 500, 600, 1K F-Class matches. I'm up to 2500 rounds and just shot a 586 at a 600 yard match at Ben Avery. Furthermore, my son and I shoot same rifle. So, we put 140 rounds through it in one match and I don't clean in for at least 2 matches. Both he and I continue to shoot personal best scores. I think a 580+ on an F-Class target indicates the barrel is still shooting under 1/2 MOA: not burned out by my standards and I'm competing for the win on a regular basis.
Some "knowledgeable" shooters told me I was only gonna get 1000-1200 rounds out of my barrel. Well, I continue kicking their butts with my "burned-out" barrel and the round count continues higher.
Wind has such a huge impact on long range shooting: I don't think you need any better than a 1/2 MOA rifle to win. Benchrest shooters throw their barrels out after 1000 rounds. But their game is way different than tactical or even F-Class.
Oh, and I'm not pushing my 243 "hard to keep up with the 260." 2930FPS with 39.0 grains of H4350.
Next time I rebarrel, plan on getting it nitrided. Heard from plenty of folks now that it extends the barrel life quite a bit. I hoping for $60 extra, that treatment will get me closer to 4,000 rounds of barrel life....on a 243.