Testing out different factory loads in my brand new Tikka .308...
I know different rifles just seem to prefer different loads (for no good reason), so I bought a few different loads to test.
I can completely understand why some groups are wider than others, but why the hell is the bottom group clustering several inches to the left? Slightly high or low I can understand as a function of velocity, but what is happening to this one load that is causing it to group to the left? Are the bullets spiralling like a football? (And if I had shot out to 200m it might be to the right then?) Or are these bullets literally exiting the barrel with a slightly leftward trajectory?
This is more of an academic question, since obviously I chose the cartridges from the middle group, but this aroused my curiosity, and I wanted to see if anyone has a good explanation
(FTR, these are 6 shot groups at 100m - five shots fired in a slow series at each target in series, and then a final shot with each of the tested cartridges at the end to try & control for barrel heating and/or fouling. Yes, I am a crappy rifle shooter, and the size of the groups is probably at least partially my poor form...)
I know different rifles just seem to prefer different loads (for no good reason), so I bought a few different loads to test.
I can completely understand why some groups are wider than others, but why the hell is the bottom group clustering several inches to the left? Slightly high or low I can understand as a function of velocity, but what is happening to this one load that is causing it to group to the left? Are the bullets spiralling like a football? (And if I had shot out to 200m it might be to the right then?) Or are these bullets literally exiting the barrel with a slightly leftward trajectory?
This is more of an academic question, since obviously I chose the cartridges from the middle group, but this aroused my curiosity, and I wanted to see if anyone has a good explanation
(FTR, these are 6 shot groups at 100m - five shots fired in a slow series at each target in series, and then a final shot with each of the tested cartridges at the end to try & control for barrel heating and/or fouling. Yes, I am a crappy rifle shooter, and the size of the groups is probably at least partially my poor form...)