This is NOT an attack on anything you said personally. I am curious though, for those who agree, what if the 10 consecutive round group is terrible, like 3 MOA? What do you do then, blame the equipment, wind, barrel mirage, load, or what?
You can contend whatever you want. But if it’s not based in any statistics or testing it’s just you guessing.I'd contend 10 shot groups introduce more variability into the equation than several 3-5 shot groups, which is why the 10 consecutive shot group is always bigger, given the same proven load.
As are you.......I'm sure you're using wind flags when shooting groups, right? If not, then you're guessing, even at 100 yds.You can contend whatever you want. But if it’s not based in any statistics or testing it’s just you guessing.
Edit: I’ll answer your question though. A 10-shot group is usually bigger because you’re getting more data about the barrel’s maximum cone. Cherry picking any 3-shots are likely to be smaller by random chance. That’s how probability and statistics works.
If you’re aggregating all of your 3-5 shot groups into one larger “group”, then no.So "multiple" 3-5 shot groups is cherry picking?
This is called a “false equivalence fallacy,” where you’re changing the subject to something different and trying to equalize it to the first subject.As are you.......I'm sure you're using wind flags when shooting groups, right? If not, then you're guessing, even at 100 yds.
They’re garbage barrels. There is no legitimate reason to suffer a barrel that isn’t properly stress relieved. It’s a coping mechanism that people tell themselves when they really believe they made a good choice on a purchase and that purchase sucks.
It’s a tool. They’re are sub $600 rifles that do not have any issue in functionality or use/ choosing a rifle that does have issues because it “looks” better and then justifying its failures is ridiculous.
So if I understand what you're saying, you feel shooting 10 shot groups is a waste of time right?I agree I suck at multi quote. I already stated I use the same target over a certain period of days. High BC obviously mitigates wind effects, but it is there, even at 100 yds. Obviously without wind flags you're guessing as to what's happening at the target, the bench, and everywhere in between. I'm sure you know conditions vary between these points often. So how do you know the wind isn't responsible for some variance in your 10 shot group if you're not using wind flags?
I've never said you're wrong for doing what your doing. For me, it's a waste of time as I've never had any trouble whatsoever finding accurate, repeatable loads for any of my HUNTING rifles.
This is NOT an attack on anything you said personally. I am curious though, for those who agree, what if the 10 consecutive round group is terrible, like 3 MOA? What do you do then, blame the equipment, wind, barrel mirage, load, or what?
#9 has me wondering. 3/4 MOA shift between centers of 10 shot groups seems notable, no?
Form how about testing cleaned rifle vs dirty now. Does it shift and for how many rounds? Heard you mention your cleaning rifles opinion on the podcast but never dove into it.