What’s it chambered in? How big are your 10 round groups?Thanks for the info.
I have a very good shooting howa1500 mounted in an axiom stock fitted with a VX3i 4x14 scope and 2# Timney trigger
Want to get in to long range shooting.
What’s the best advice/piece of equipment one should have to be successful?
.223 never really shot a 10 shot group. It’s a fantastic shooting rifle very capable of 1/2 moa if I do my part @ 100 yardsWhat’s it chambered in? How big are your 10 round groups?
Are you open to swapping the scope out? I would, without question. SWFA, Trijicon, Maven RS1.2, Nightforce.
Leupold VX-3HD 3.5-10x40mm CDS-ZL Field Evaluation
This is a field evaluation of a Leupold VX-3HD 3.5-10x40mm CDS-ZL scope. This scope was sent to Ryan Avery for an evaluation. The ammunition used was Hornady Black 168gr AMAX that was purchased by Ryan. The 20 round proof group was just over 1.3 MOA. The scope and weight- Turrets...rokslide.com
It's probably not 1/2 MOA even if you do your part perfectly. I don't mean that negatively, I mean it by if you've never shot even a 10 shot group, or multiple 5 shot groups and correlated X & Y with POA, you probably don't know the actual cone of fire the system and shooter produce..223 never really shot a 10 shot group. It’s a fantastic shooting rifle very capable of 1/2 moa if I do my part @ 100 yards
Seriously. this is the long range hunting forum…A bow or a traditional muzzleloader. Seriously. Learn to hunt first, shoot second.
Knowing this does help.It's probably not 1/2 MOA even if you do your part perfectly. I don't mean that negatively, I mean it by if you've never shot even a 10 shot group, or multiple 5 shot groups and correlated X & Y with POA, you probably don't know the actual cone of fire the system and shooter produce.
My advice is learn that first, and perfect your zero. Then you can use math to confirm the error. Shoot a 20 shot group at 100 yards as tight as you possibly can, and see how big the group is. If it's 1 MOA then that's what you can expect at any distance as long as you "do your part", because dispersion is linear (+ ~15% because the group would continue to grow if you were to continue sending rounds into it). If you miss a 1.5 MOA target at distance, or your group grows to 3 MOA sitting seated supported or shooting off a pack, you know it was shooter or computation error.
Sure, I know. That wasn’t a swipe, it’s a genuine statement. I like long range shooting too. But hunting skills are more important, and imo, more difficult to learn. With today’s equipment, the shooting part is rather easy. My only point is learn the woodsmanship part first, then learn the shooting. You’ll be more successful in the long run. You have to find the critters first before you can shoot them.Seriously. this is the long range hunting forum…
Sure, I know. That wasn’t a swipe, it’s a genuine statement. I like long range shooting too. But hunting skills are more important, and imo, more difficult to learn. With today’s equipment, the shooting part is rather easy. My only point is learn the woodsmanship part first, then learn the shooting. You’ll be more successful in the long run. You have to find the critters first before you can shoot them.
Easy is relative, but within 15 minutes the other day I had my young teen son easily hitting an 8” gong at 450 yards 100% of the time. And he’d never shot half that far before. That’s getting into LR territory to me.Shooting part is easy?
I understand the sentiment you pose, but I disagree.
I learned to find game and hunt and how to shoot long range all at the same time. We can do all at the same time.
How do you know that’s he’s not already Fred Bear of 2025? He’s asking about long range shooting, not really hunting, although it is in the long range hunting forum.Sure, I know. That wasn’t a swipe, it’s a genuine statement. I like long range shooting too. But hunting skills are more important, and imo, more difficult to learn. With today’s equipment, the shooting part is rather easy. My only point is learn the woodsmanship part first, then learn the shooting. You’ll be more successful in the long run. You have to find the critters first before you can shoot them.
Sure, I do the same with kids and adults all the way out to 1000. Pulling the trigger without disturbing the rifle is pretty easy to learn, on a suitable mild recoiling rifle.Easy is relative, but within 15 minutes the other day I had my young teen son easily hitting an 8” gong at 450 yards 100% of the time. And he’d never shot half that far before. That’s getting into LR territory to me.
It’s an old debate. You aren’t wrong and I’m not wrong. We can still be friends.