Depending on what your gun likes
What my rifle likes? That I can answer.
It likes well made cartridges with a minimum of factory defects and tight muzzle velocities.
Anything else and the results are less than desirable.
Brand means nothing, if the cartridges are not well made and the mv's jump up and down.
No rifle can fix cr*ppy ammunition, no matter how many claims of "sub-moa all day long" are posted.
The reason I've taken to using the Grid for ammunition testing, is my results with groups lied.
Random acts of accuracy that wander around my point of aim aren't proof of consistent results.
When I started measuring group aggregate sizes, I found my overall spread was 2 to three times worse than I thought.
Sure, I had an average group size of 1/2 inch, but the aggregate size was 1.5 inches at 50 yards.
So what if I had a couple of 0.3's, when I also had a couple of 0.7's and they all were in different positions relative to point of aim.
At this time I'm tracking wear on a new CZ 455 factory barrel.
I was told that I had no proof of barrel wear with rimfire ammunition.
So I purchased a borescope and a new 22lr heavy barrel and have been documenting the differences in the rifling.
I've been shooting the Grid to track results with the factory barrel.
At this point I have 1600 shots through the barrel. When I hit 2000, I'll be capturing images of the bore again.
At that point I'll swap barrels back to my Lilja or Shilen and use some better cartridges. In the meantime,
no use burning 30 cent a cartridge on a factory barrel that can barely maintain 2 moa at 50 yards.
In the meantime, with winter over, some of the rest of ya' ought to give the Grid a go.
See how well y'er rig can do for 50 shots at 50 yards, when you try to hit what you aim at.