Cold bore zero versus (very) Hot bore zero “test”

Missed what happened to get the adventures of the Gun-nuts deleted.

Just have to use your imagination, where atop the mountain where Dalai Lama was waiting, and how they followed the Shell casing road to Armament city to meet the Great and Powerful …

Just silliness with silliness, hope there’s no grudges.
 
I'm sure that it's happened some time in the past 6 years or so on rokslide, but are there comparison photos of someone doing the 30 days "cold bore" group and a 30 round hot barrel group that someone can point me to?
 
Only in hunting/gun industry is not practicing and being unskilled something to brag about.
Form, more nonsense, really?


What is it, in all your Grandiose testing data, that makes you conclude long range Hunters are unskilled?

And keep in mind, it is a Hunting forum, you spend all your time on.


We may have different definitions of Skilled.

What we achieve from rounds measured in the Hundreds, takes you Thousands.

Who really, is the unskilled one?
 
I'm going to frame this and hang it on my wall. Truly a work of art. Ain't no way real people actually think this way.
Most people over estimate their skill and avoid objective measures of it to remain content.

The normal function of the human brain makes doing this easy.

I considered myself a mediocre shot at best. Yet with a 8.5 pound 223 I placed in the middle of the pack at a local PRS match (I think 14th out of 33, but would have to look up the results to be sure), most people shooting gamer guns. I had never shot PRS before, never practiced the positions, never seen it done prior to that day.

It shows how poorly most people shoot even in a group that likely has more skill than the average hunter.
 
Form, more nonsense, really?


What is it, in all your Grandiose testing data, that makes you conclude long range Hunters are unskilled?

And keep in mind, it is a Hunting forum, you spend all your time on.


We may have different definitions of Skilled.

What we achieve from rounds measured in the Hundreds, takes you Thousands.

Who really, is the unskilled one?
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I considered myself a mediocre shot at best. Yet with a 8.5 pound 223 I placed in the middle of the pack at a local PRS match (I think 14th out of 33, but would have to look up the results to be sure), most people shooting gamer guns. I had never shot PRS before, never practiced the positions, never seen it done prior to that day.
I am a very bad shot in my opinion, but I've competed at a very high level in very unrelated things. In every new thing that I learn and practice, I go into it seeing myself as the ignorant beginner in the discipline that know best. When I frame it that way, it's pretty sobering and motivating to be humble and put in the work.
 
Form, more nonsense, really?


What is it, in all your Grandiose testing data, that makes you conclude long range Hunters are unskilled?

And keep in mind, it is a Hunting forum, you spend all your time on.


We may have different definitions of Skilled.

What we achieve from rounds measured in the Hundreds, takes you Thousands.

Who really, is the unskilled one?
Please to be showing us your footages for your mature shooting capables!!!
 
Form, more nonsense, really?


What is it, in all your Grandiose testing data, that makes you conclude long range Hunters are unskilled?

And keep in mind, it is a Hunting forum, you spend all your time on.


We may have different definitions of Skilled.

What we achieve from rounds measured in the Hundreds, takes you Thousands.

Who really, is the unskilled one?
There are a bunch of us who may not agree with EVERYTHING Form says but no one should argue that less practice makes you a better marksman. Shooting from field positions needs to be done repeatedly to obtain muscle memory. Muscle memory needs to be maintained or else it is lost. In the off season, how often do you shoot in your hunting positions in the same terrain you hunt in? I shoot steel and ground squirrels in areas we hunt deer and elk using the same (or similar) weapons we hunt with. We know our distances and how the terrain affects our trajectory because of this. Lots of people never know why they miss because taking 1 shot at an animal doesn't give you any data points to learn from.

Let me guess, you never miss a target no matter the distance, terrain, target, or wind?

Jay
 
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