I am heading out on a prairie dog hunt here in a couple of weeks, and in an effort to be able to shoot a lot of affordable ammo I picked up a used SPS Tactical in .223 (the SPS Tacticals have a 9 twist in .223) from a friend. I dropped it into a B&C Medalist stock that I had sitting around, and scoped it with a Weaver tactical 3-15x50 in a DNZ one piece mount. I also had a Tubb Final Finish kit sitting around that I've been itching to use, and I figured that this would be a great application for it given the number of rounds that I am planning on putting through it at the prairie dog hunt (read: ease of cleaning).
So, fast forward to this past Friday. I go out to the range and get on a 50 yard target because the rifle had only been bore-sighted to this point. I figured that as long as I was going to be doing the Final Finish thing, the 50 yard range would suffice; I just needed to be able to verify that my rounds weren't going over the berm. The instructions for the Final Finish indicate that if the (factory) barrel isn't capable of holding a sub-1.5" group at 100, start with grit/compound #1, and if it IS capable of holding a sub-1.5" group at 100, start with grit/compound #3. So I get the scope roughed in, and go to shoot a group at 50... it seems to be shooting a 1.5"-2" group at 50 yards. This strikes me as abysmal, but what the hell. So, compound #1 it is, right?
Shoot-and-clean, shoot-and clean, all the way through the 50 rounds of the Final Finish kit. The last group I shoot with the compound #5 bullets was a 10 shot group that could be easily covered by a nickel (again, at 50 yards). Looks pretty okay to me (given what my setup and skills are). One more thorough bore cleaning (KG1, KG12, KG2, and KG4), and it's off to the 100 yard line... which is where the wheels came off.
Using Hornady 53gr Superformance ammo, I was ALL OVER the map. As in, 2" 3-shot groups. W...T...F??? Mostly horizontal dispersion, but a bit of vertical as well. I was shooting off of sand bags front and rear. After burning a $20 box of .223 ammo doing this, I was fed up so I packed it in for the day.
While I understand that I'm not Carlos Hathcock and my rifle isn't going to be used by anyone who is interested in winning any sort of national championship, this is just pathetic. Looking back, I have to wonder if the problem wasn't a lack of support/stabilization on the fore end; I was using my right hand on the pistol grip/trigger (ya think??), and my left hand to squeeze the sandbag under the pistol grip for final shot alignment. The stock was pulled securely into my shoulder, and I have previously used this shooting technique to shoot MUCH better groups than I am getting now.
So, what do y'all think... am I just a spastic shooter, or did I lunch my barrel with the Final Finish kit?
So, fast forward to this past Friday. I go out to the range and get on a 50 yard target because the rifle had only been bore-sighted to this point. I figured that as long as I was going to be doing the Final Finish thing, the 50 yard range would suffice; I just needed to be able to verify that my rounds weren't going over the berm. The instructions for the Final Finish indicate that if the (factory) barrel isn't capable of holding a sub-1.5" group at 100, start with grit/compound #1, and if it IS capable of holding a sub-1.5" group at 100, start with grit/compound #3. So I get the scope roughed in, and go to shoot a group at 50... it seems to be shooting a 1.5"-2" group at 50 yards. This strikes me as abysmal, but what the hell. So, compound #1 it is, right?
Shoot-and-clean, shoot-and clean, all the way through the 50 rounds of the Final Finish kit. The last group I shoot with the compound #5 bullets was a 10 shot group that could be easily covered by a nickel (again, at 50 yards). Looks pretty okay to me (given what my setup and skills are). One more thorough bore cleaning (KG1, KG12, KG2, and KG4), and it's off to the 100 yard line... which is where the wheels came off.
Using Hornady 53gr Superformance ammo, I was ALL OVER the map. As in, 2" 3-shot groups. W...T...F??? Mostly horizontal dispersion, but a bit of vertical as well. I was shooting off of sand bags front and rear. After burning a $20 box of .223 ammo doing this, I was fed up so I packed it in for the day.
While I understand that I'm not Carlos Hathcock and my rifle isn't going to be used by anyone who is interested in winning any sort of national championship, this is just pathetic. Looking back, I have to wonder if the problem wasn't a lack of support/stabilization on the fore end; I was using my right hand on the pistol grip/trigger (ya think??), and my left hand to squeeze the sandbag under the pistol grip for final shot alignment. The stock was pulled securely into my shoulder, and I have previously used this shooting technique to shoot MUCH better groups than I am getting now.
So, what do y'all think... am I just a spastic shooter, or did I lunch my barrel with the Final Finish kit?