Luke S
Lil-Rokslider
- Joined
- Jul 7, 2019
- Messages
- 232
I was shopping for good deal on a .223 in Anchorage and scored a deal on a Kimber Hunter in 6.5 Creedmore that was so good I couldn't pass it up. So I've tried the rifle and accuracy seemed lacking. I redid the rings and put my SWFA Ultralight 2.5-10 on it. First three shots were sub MOA as advertised but I had to really concentrate to hold it steady. After that my group opened up to a bit over 2 MOA with 3 more rounds. That was all the ammo I had after testing with the original scope and bore siting so I stopped there. No stringing or anything just a bigger shot pattern.
First, I suspect the rifle itself is more accurate then me. I'm no sniper but I regularly shoot better then that with my heavier .308 (especially suppressed).
So what to do?
One idea I had was to spread multiple 3 shot groups out over several days, get a statistically valid group size and go from there.
If I recall Form said somewhere that Kimbers are typically 2 MOA rifles with his bigger groups. That should be enough for my ranges (400 yards or less). Maybe I should just stick a suppressor on it and go practice more.
Thoughts? I know Kimbers aren't thought of as highly as Tikkas here but I didn't pay Tikka money for it either.
First, I suspect the rifle itself is more accurate then me. I'm no sniper but I regularly shoot better then that with my heavier .308 (especially suppressed).
So what to do?
One idea I had was to spread multiple 3 shot groups out over several days, get a statistically valid group size and go from there.
If I recall Form said somewhere that Kimbers are typically 2 MOA rifles with his bigger groups. That should be enough for my ranges (400 yards or less). Maybe I should just stick a suppressor on it and go practice more.
Thoughts? I know Kimbers aren't thought of as highly as Tikkas here but I didn't pay Tikka money for it either.