So why is a 5 shot the standard for groups but not for velocity?
I’ve been seeing a lot of discussions lately about SD numbers being useless without a large sample size. I agree that the SD may be unreliable with a smaller sample size but I don’t think it is completely worthless.
I use the 5 shot SD/ES number as a reference as to the quality of my load, the same as I use a 5 shot group. For taking a detailed look at average speed and ES/SD of my load I usually do it during drop verification/dope truing, of 15 shots over the chronograph plus a 5 round group (20 total). The SD is usually within 66% of the 5 shot SD. I also do a a 5 shot SD during muzzle velocity checks on each lot of reloading to check the average speed/ group size. (250-600 rounds, this also lets me monitor barre health) I find that these 5 shot groups result in the average speed being +\- 5 to 10 FPS and the SD always around the same.
when I see inexperienced reloaders being told that their 5 shot SD of 7 is meaningless, and you have to have a group size of 25-100 to develop meaningful data I think that is overkill for a guy who is probably here for PRS style shooting, who shoots at most a 10-12 shot string. On the other hand the inexperienced reloader needs to understand his SD isn’t really 7 it’s probably closer to 100-150% of that 5 shot group. I also think of you can consistently get sub 10fps 5 shot SD your reloading practices are probably pretty sound.
sorry for taking up band width I just hate to see a lot of new shooters / new reloaders wasting time and components chasing numbers and developing loads that shoot .25, when once they get around a 1/2 MOA group with a real sub 15 FPS SD (5 shot as of 5-7)They should be practicing, not laying prone in the dirt shooting groups or gathering velocity data.
If load development, shooting tiny groups, or getting an honest SD of less than 5 is your thing that’s cool too. But if your looking for a competitive load for Precision Rifle Matches, stop at 1/2 MOA with a decent SD and go practice.
I’ve been seeing a lot of discussions lately about SD numbers being useless without a large sample size. I agree that the SD may be unreliable with a smaller sample size but I don’t think it is completely worthless.
I use the 5 shot SD/ES number as a reference as to the quality of my load, the same as I use a 5 shot group. For taking a detailed look at average speed and ES/SD of my load I usually do it during drop verification/dope truing, of 15 shots over the chronograph plus a 5 round group (20 total). The SD is usually within 66% of the 5 shot SD. I also do a a 5 shot SD during muzzle velocity checks on each lot of reloading to check the average speed/ group size. (250-600 rounds, this also lets me monitor barre health) I find that these 5 shot groups result in the average speed being +\- 5 to 10 FPS and the SD always around the same.
when I see inexperienced reloaders being told that their 5 shot SD of 7 is meaningless, and you have to have a group size of 25-100 to develop meaningful data I think that is overkill for a guy who is probably here for PRS style shooting, who shoots at most a 10-12 shot string. On the other hand the inexperienced reloader needs to understand his SD isn’t really 7 it’s probably closer to 100-150% of that 5 shot group. I also think of you can consistently get sub 10fps 5 shot SD your reloading practices are probably pretty sound.
sorry for taking up band width I just hate to see a lot of new shooters / new reloaders wasting time and components chasing numbers and developing loads that shoot .25, when once they get around a 1/2 MOA group with a real sub 15 FPS SD (5 shot as of 5-7)They should be practicing, not laying prone in the dirt shooting groups or gathering velocity data.
If load development, shooting tiny groups, or getting an honest SD of less than 5 is your thing that’s cool too. But if your looking for a competitive load for Precision Rifle Matches, stop at 1/2 MOA with a decent SD and go practice.