DangerRanger
WKR
I take a cold bore shot every range trip, extremely important to me
It is THE most important shot especially as a hunter (quite obviously). I've never shot a 10 round group in my life, as I consider it a waste of ammo. I will take the same target though, and shoot several 3 shot groups over several days at it. I've never shot more than 3-4 rounds at a game animal in succession in my hunting life (52 years now).I take a cold bore shot every range trip, extremely important to me
It can definitely be both. One way to be sure is to take one on a vise or shooting rest...if you ever wanted to be anal about it, which no one here ever does, especially not me LOLi have not had any issues with my cold bore shot not falling within my guns larger group.
Imo cold bore shots are tracking my performance not my rifles
Sounds like a ton of fun. You are fortunate to have a buddy that's willing to practice with you like that! Makes it more enjoyable.A buddy and I try to do something similar every other week throughout the summer. I have 2 targets set up about 1/2 mile behind my house; one at roughly 550 and one at roughly 680.
We load our packs to roughly 30lbs and take off from my house on foot. It’s all uphill and we make sure to push it.
Once we’re within 50 yards of the shooting area one of us will go ahead and pick a spot to shoot from and set up a spotter real quick. We try to pick a different spot every time so that the terrain you’re setting up in is slightly different, be it under a tree, or on uneven ground.
Once guy #1 gets into position, guy #2 continues up the hill at hunting speed. Not still hunting speed, but moving through deer country speed. When guy #2 has seen the target, guy #1 starts the stop watch. Obviously the quality of the shot is vastly more important than speed, but we like to get as efficient as we can at throwing our pack off, setting the rifle up, ranging the target and dialing the scope.
We take turns doing this until each of us has fired 5 rounds. We do it in the evening and be sure to put our rifles in the shade of a tree after each shot. The barrels seem to be back to ambient temperature by the time it’s your turn to shoot again.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Sounds like a ton of fun. You are fortunate to have a buddy that's willing to practice with you like that! Makes it more enjoyable.
I never shoot with a clean bore… right, wrong or indifferent, I gave up on cleaning barrels a few years ago when I decided I would clean when the rifle quit shooting well… still waiting.I never hunt with a clean bore.
P
That's correct. My go-to long range rifle shoots slightly high on the first 2 shots after cleaning with a little additional dispersion. That's with two passes of a dry patch tight down the bore after cleaning. Shot 3 is very close but not dead on. The next five will typically group about 0.8 sometimes better, sometimes worse but almost never 1 inch.I think a ‘clean bore’ shot is more significant than a ‘cold bore’ shot. A lot of the historical data talking about a cold bore shot is actually a clean cold bore resulting in a more dramatic shift than simply a cold bore.
The Marine Corps finally changed its bore cleaning regimen on the M40 series after significant evidence showed that the cleaning affected the cold bore zero more than the cold bore.
How would someone not without an ovenI take a cold bore shot every range trip, extremely important to me
I see what you did there…I take a cold bore shot every range trip, extremely important to me