- Joined
- Oct 22, 2014
- Messages
- 10,126
You are referencing data by a presumably notable facility to bolster your statement, and I simply asked for the white paper from the test performed by the unnamed "best ballistic test facility". That is "obtuse" to you, haha. I am not agreeing or disagreeing with you, just asking for the data. I don't get why you are being so cagey over the 'math' & testing data that you specifically reference.....it's weird man, just post it up.
The obtuse part isn’t asking to see data, the obtuse part is that if you understand White Papers, testing, etc., and my responses, then it’s obvious that even if a paper was marked for public distribution, I wouldn’t post it.
Out of context, and standing alone that statement could be an appeal to authority. However in context, no- it’s not.
Hmmm, maybe it's telling that you latched onto a generic statement of internet experts??? But seriously, myself and several other guys have been discussing the statistical significance of round counts for groups.
Don’t be passive aggressive. Everyone knows who you meant with that statement, because you have done it multiple times. If you’re going to say it, own it.
From the test I spoke of-
Wiseman-
Partial results with one barrel and match ammo-
The target with 100 rounds-
That gun also had a sub moa average (.8 IIRC) for thirty-three, 3 round groups.
So the question is, is that barrel fired mechanically from a 6,000 pound rest, permanently attached to a 60,000 pound block that is buried over 6ft in the earth, and fired in a tunnel-
A .8 inch gun (avg of 33x3 shot groups)?
A 1.2 inch gun (Avg 5x4 shot groups, with a group reduction added)?
A 2.01 inch gun (avg of 3x10 round groups)?
A 2.72 inch gun (30 round group)
Or a 3.26 inch gun (100 round group)?
The answer is obvious. Regardless of what anyone wants to say, that barrel is a 3.11 MOA rifle AT BEST. A gun can not be a “sub MOA” gun, unless it will consistently, repeatedly, and on demand put each bullet into a sub MOA target. To state otherwise for a forum dedicated to practical rifle use is being intellectually dishonest.
I have had a bunch of users (relatively speaking) with very capable rifle systems and ammo, and when asked on a questionnaire what their rifles accuracy is, not one of them has hit that sized target 10 times a few minutes later- not one. The answe is also obvious if people let go of the BS. That answer is the rifles aren’t “X” MOA.
I also posted a few pictures from recent shooting that show the kinds of groups that I see out of my hunting rifles with factory ammo. So to spell it out for you, I do not agree with the idea that 2 MOA is a mechanical standard of precision that should be expected from hunting rifles/ammo. I also don't necessarily agree that (3) 10-round groups is the best indicator of zero or of the expected precision from a rifle/scope/ammo/shooter/etc. Of course we agree that shooting more and having more data is better than shooting less. There's a lot of ways to skin this cat.
Your groups are good, yet for the 100 yard’ish ones, regardless of group size, they didn’t all hit a 1moa dot. I understand testing loads or whatever, but even with that, if your are being honest and at 100 yards, those rifles aren't going to hit a .37, .78, .64 MOA target on demand. And if it won’t hit those targets, then they aren’t .37, .78, .64 MOA rifles and the group sizes for practical use is nearly meaningless. I post quite a few 10 round groups that are sub MOA and way sun MOA, yet those rifles are not sub MOA guns because they won’t put every (or nearly) bullet into a sub MOA target at even 100 yards. They are 1, to 1.2 MOA rifles regardless of the fact that over half of 10 roun groups will be under 1 MOA. Average 3 round groups are in the .3’s....
As far as factory rifles/factory ammo being 2 MOA, you are correct.... They’re not 2 MOA, they’re generally much worse. Take ten rifles from each major manufacturer in 6mm and up, use any rest you want, sandbags, a machine, whatever; take a couple different types of factory ammo and fire 30 rounds through each rifle in whatever amount per “group”, order, cool times... do it ever how you want. Very few- VERY few, of those rifles will have all 30 rounds under 1.5 MOA. And most of the ones that will do so, will be Finnish, Scandinavian, or European made, and chambered in 6XC/CM, 6.5 CM, 308 if using match, 300PRC and Norma.
Anyone can take their rifle and try the above. Do it in 30x1 shot groups, 10x3 shot groups, etc. Do it ever how you want. Do not use any group reduction techniques at all- every round that comes out of the barrel counts. At the end of a whole 30 rounds you will KNOW what your rifle will do, but you probably won’t like it.
As far as agreeeing about ten round groups or not, it doesn’t really matter. When someone is asking about grouping, accuracy, trouble shooting a rifle, etc. some nebulous “shoot more rounds” or worse all the nonsense that people post that just take the person farther from the solution, doesn’t help the person asking the question. People need something that has a very high probability of success and we need whatever “data” they get to be consistent and mean something to us so we can compare and get a standard to use. People seem to want every excuse to NOT shoot, so getting someone to shoot a single ten round group is hard enough, getting them to shoot more rounds is nearly impossible, mainly because people are running around calling BS on things they don’t understand.
When I suggest a certain rifle, cartridge, scope, ammo, 10 round groups, free float the barrel, bed, etc. it’s because I know what the results will be- not because I’m guessing.