It's a joy to carry and shoot.That’s a sleek and simple looking rifle. I bet it handles really nicely.
Its interesting, I guess people have different ways to go about achieving the same thing. To my credit, a 3/4moa target (3” at 400) is a LOT harder for me to reliably hit than a 1moa target (a clay pigeon, which is 110mm or 4.33 inches). And both are also considerably smaller than a cow elks head at 100-200 yards. All of these are great shooting, but I remain most impressed with 100% reliability on 1st-round 3/4moa hits at 400 yards with any hunting rifle. Thats exceptional.
The tikka I don't own.
In reality, all my rifles shoot adequately the same. For me, all I care about is being able to hit a 3" circle at 400 yds "cold bore" first shot.
Maybe? I understood it as a statement of being able to do it reliably. If someone can do that reliably I remain highly impressed. Any decent rifle will do it most of the time. If someone says they can do it, I am inclined to believe it until proven otherwise…I just have never seen anyone do that all the time even with expensive customs, except maybe a full-on benchrest rig some of the time. Hence being impressed. But yeah, being able to say what I can do ALL the time is the reason for the larger group sizes.I feel like you guys are talking past each other a bit. He didn't say 100% cold bore hits but rather that his rifles "be able to hit", which is near meaningless. It does play well with the rest of his logic about not shooting much or shooting groups though. A 3 MOA rifle is "able to" hit a 3/4" target.
Regardless, he's not hitting a 3/4 MOA circle 100% of the time @ 400 yards with any meaningful # of shots.
Maybe? I understood it as a statement of being able to do it reliably. If someone can do that reliably I remain highly impressed. Any decent rifle will do it most of the time. If someone says they can do it, I am inclined to believe it until proven otherwise…I just have never seen anyone do that all the time even with expensive customs, except maybe a full-on benchrest rig some of the time. Hence being impressed. But yeah, being able to say what I can do ALL the time is the reason for the larger group sizes.
I feel like you guys are talking past each other a bit. He didn't say 100% cold bore hits but rather that his rifles "be able to hit", which is near meaningless. It does play well with the rest of his logic about not shooting much or shooting groups though. A 3 MOA rifle is "able to" hit a 3/4" target.
Regardless, he's not hitting a 3/4 MOA circle 100% of the time @ 400 yards with any meaningful # of shots.
Maybe? I understood it as a statement of being able to do it reliably. If someone can do that reliably I remain highly impressed. Any decent rifle will do it most of the time. If someone says they can do it, I am inclined to believe it until proven otherwise…I just have never seen anyone do that all the time even with expensive customs, except maybe a full-on benchrest rig some of the time. Hence being impressed. But yeah, being able to say what I can do ALL the time is the reason for the larger group sizes.
One theme I found going through this thread is that the older Briowning A-Bolts/A-Bolt II’s are very accurate and loved. You all are making me regret selling mine.
That's not really a thing. Unless there's stress in the grain structure of the barrel causing it to deviate from heat, the cold bore will fall within the cone of fire that rifle and load produces. If the following shots don't hit the target, there's zero validity to expecting any cold bore after that to impact as well.I simply meant that I'm not relying on warming the barrel up enough to get the MOA group average for repeatability when shooting multiple rounds in a short(er) timeframe.
In a hunting situation, the 1st shot is the only shot that really matters and a rifle being shot that 1st time after sitting in the open air for 2 hours at 15 deg F needs to be able to hit what you're aiming at, preferably within an "MOA" at whatever distance within reason. If there is a miss, I want to know that it wasn't the rifle.
The reason you're getting grilled on here is because there probably isn't a shooter in the world who can make 95%+ hit rates on a 3/4 MOA target at 400 yards in field conditions with a hunting weight rifle.I simply meant that I'm not relying on warming the barrel up enough to get the MOA group average for repeatability when shooting multiple rounds in a short(er) timeframe.
In a hunting situation, the 1st shot is the only shot that really matters and a rifle being shot that 1st time after sitting in the open air for 2 hours at 15 deg F needs to be able to hit what you're aiming at, preferably within an "MOA" at whatever distance within reason. If there is a miss, I want to know that it wasn't the rifle.
Just when I had about talked myself out of buying a mini in the Grendel, you post this. Goodbye money.I have one of the newer howa mini action in 6.5 grendel with the carbon fiber barrel. Its like 5.7lb with simple leupold 3-9x40 scope loaded. With the newer hornady vmatch ammo it will do a full 20 round box of ammo in 5 round increments allowing some time to cool between inside a half to 3/4 inch group all day as long as you don't let the suppressor mirage get to you. It does lose accuracy once it gets too dirty, say 250 rounds, but as soon as you give it a good cleaning it comes right back to the 1/2-3/4 moa range. I also suspect 1/2-3/4" is just the best I can do with a 3-9 scope seeing as the center of the crosshair covers the half inch red dot on the target at 100yds. I have on my wish list to get a higher magnification and finer reticle for it and see if I can eek out an even tighter group. I never expected to love this little rifle as much as I do.
.62 for 10 shots is seriously excellent. I’d take a 10 shot .6 over a 3 shot .2 any day of the week lol.That's not really a thing. Unless there's stress in the grain structure of the barrel causing it to deviate from heat, the cold bore will fall within the cone of fire that rifle and load produces. If the following shots don't hit the target, there's zero validity to expecting any cold bore after that to impact as well.
In lieu of this thread, my 2 best hunting rifles are a Tikka-custom 25 Creedmoor, and a Tikka D-18 in 6.5 PRC that's been chopped to 21" and touched up with the AW2 reamer to prevent clickers. They're tied up in group ES for 10 shots. The 25 Creed group is a composite from 2 different days.
View attachment 760279View attachment 760280
The reason you're getting grilled on here is because there probably isn't a shooter in the world who can make 95%+ hit rates on a 3/4 MOA target at 400 yards in field conditions with a hunting weight rifle.
If you can, you need to quit your day job, so you can go win the PRS national match, get a bunch of sponsors, and probably open your own shooting school.
That's not really a thing. Unless there's stress in the grain structure of the barrel causing it to deviate from heat, the cold bore will fall within the cone of fire that rifle and load produces. If the following shots don't hit the target, there's zero validity to expecting any cold bore after that to impact as well.
In lieu of this thread, my 2 best hunting rifles are a Tikka-custom 25 Creedmoor, and a Tikka D-18 in 6.5 PRC that's been chopped to 21" and touched up with the AW2 reamer to prevent clickers. They're tied up in group ES for 10 shots. The 25 Creed group is a composite from 2 different days.
Me too. 90% of what I hear is badJust when I had about talked myself out of buying a mini in the Grendel, you post this. Goodbye money.