Hi people,
Many gunbuilders and manufacturers claim a ".5 MOA guarantee for 3 shot groups with match grade ammo".
What does that mean?
That I shoot 10 groups with any "Match" ammo and one of these groups will be .5 MOA?
That I shoot 10 shots and the best 3 hits will be closer than .5 MOA?
That 9/10 3 round groups are .5 MOA?
If each 3 round group is guaranteed to be less than .5 MOA, 5 rounds should not make it bigger either as no "flyers" are allowed.
I documented a lot in during the last year, as I was facing precision issues with one of my 308. I would regularly see good 3 round groups and sometimes also 5 shots but sometimes also the first 2 rounds would be spread wide. Extending the groups to 10 rounds would never result in realy small groups. The 10 round groups stayed constant in size though and would also not differ seriously from a 20 round group (I logged and printed all shots in an excel file).
I often see people shooting 3-4 close rounds and then there is the 5th round a bit off the group and it is always "I jerked that one". I can shoot under 1 MOA (10 rounds) with my good rifle, but suddenly jerk bullets off with another rifle? Therefore I became a big fan of big groups (10 rounds) for tesing reloads to be sure I am not judging the lucky 3. 3 rounds can confirm a bad load but only 10 seem to be able to realy confirm a good load.
How do you determine the capability/precision of your rifle? What can one expect from the "guaranteed precision"?
Thanks a lot for your ideas...
Many gunbuilders and manufacturers claim a ".5 MOA guarantee for 3 shot groups with match grade ammo".
What does that mean?
That I shoot 10 groups with any "Match" ammo and one of these groups will be .5 MOA?
That I shoot 10 shots and the best 3 hits will be closer than .5 MOA?
That 9/10 3 round groups are .5 MOA?
If each 3 round group is guaranteed to be less than .5 MOA, 5 rounds should not make it bigger either as no "flyers" are allowed.
I documented a lot in during the last year, as I was facing precision issues with one of my 308. I would regularly see good 3 round groups and sometimes also 5 shots but sometimes also the first 2 rounds would be spread wide. Extending the groups to 10 rounds would never result in realy small groups. The 10 round groups stayed constant in size though and would also not differ seriously from a 20 round group (I logged and printed all shots in an excel file).
I often see people shooting 3-4 close rounds and then there is the 5th round a bit off the group and it is always "I jerked that one". I can shoot under 1 MOA (10 rounds) with my good rifle, but suddenly jerk bullets off with another rifle? Therefore I became a big fan of big groups (10 rounds) for tesing reloads to be sure I am not judging the lucky 3. 3 rounds can confirm a bad load but only 10 seem to be able to realy confirm a good load.
How do you determine the capability/precision of your rifle? What can one expect from the "guaranteed precision"?
Thanks a lot for your ideas...