This topic of troubleshooting a loss of zero or a gun that seems to suddenly be less precise than normal comes up so frequently that I'm surprised I haven't seen a dedicated thread on the topic. I am interested in what people's specific process and order of operations is for diagnosing a problem with a rifle holding zero or a change in accuracy or precision. By this I mean, in a situation where a gun that was zeroed suddenly and inexplicably starts putting shots off the zero (shots were dead-on, now it's low and left), or precision changed noticeably (groups were 1.25", now it's 3"), what exactly do you do, and in what order do you do it, to determine exactly what part of the gun system is the problem (stock/action/rail/rings/scope/shooter), and go about fixing that? ie it doesnt do you any good to replace the scope if the stock-to-action interface is the problem, and vice versa--so what is the MOST FOOLPROOF AND EFFICIENT way to make that determination of which part of the system needs attention?
- What do you do ahead of time to anticipate a problem that facilitates a quick diagnosis? (before you have a problem--clean/degrease and torque, witness marks, loctite or paint, etc on initial setup). Perhaps the "scope mounting to maintain zero" process, but what else? Record keeping? other?
- Zero process so you know the true cone for the gun and can determine if something is truly a shift versus when you are just seeing a group that includes a shot or two from the fringe of the cone of fire.
- When you notice a problem what is your first step--try to repeat the sequence of shots, tear something apart, etc? Second step, etc.
- What is the most efficient process (from a time, equipment, effort and ammunition requirement perspective) to isolate the issue to one part of the system?
- anything else?
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