Ultimately I am beginning to believe that if we have a better understanding of the limitations of what we do, if we do it differently, it will result in less shots on paper doing things that are meaningless
I think thats what a few of us might have been arguing.
I think your limitations are very low gimp.You should shoot 20 shot groups and waste more ammo.
Very easier to practice head shots(tight groups)=deer head at the range 200-250yds with a good rest.Practice shooting at a few rocks out on the hills.Totally different resting yr rilfe on a pack or shooting sticks while you are kneeling or standing,lying down on a hill side.Its not the groups you can shoot,its the different shooting positions you gota practice at and be comfortable with.Then try and hit a 4 inch rock=deer head at 200-250yds on a hill side.
Last edited by Trout; 07-06-2024 at 09:54 AM.
Do about 3 or 4 lower neck shots per yr only inside about 100-200yds,mostly sholder shots,problem solved.Dont bother with head shots,deer skulls are only a small boney structure.Very easy to fk up yr shot and leave a deer running wounded.99% of my deer are shot off the bonnect of my truck like my shooting at the range.So im well practice with my shooting position.All deer are shot on open flat country that iv been on for the last 10yrs.Cant wait to till spring.
the old DOC shoot was 4 stages 5 rounds each stage at 100 yards - one lying ( elbows only ) one kneeling one standing all shot in ones own time - and one run 5 yards load and shoot in I think it was 10 seconds - to practice for it I used to just practice standing and the run and load - that was the hardest to master well - but I dont bother with head shots over 100 m - despite the fact that my .222 and 308 are likely capable out to 200 - seldom have time for a decent rest
I think the difference is in what we consider the limitations to be, and what we consider wasting time/ammo.
I consider that 3 or even 5 shot groups taken in isolation don't tell us enough to be meaningful IF we want to make an accurate statement about our rifle system's performance, IF we wish to understand the effects of "load development" OR if we wish to have higher confidence in hitting things consistently at longer ranges, and it's much more efficient and wastes less time/ammo to just shoot enough shots to gather enough data to be better informed. If our interest is limited to shooting deer at a couple of hundred metres, these discussions are probably not the right ones to get involved in, as it is explicitly not about that subject.
My suggested approach is to do less fiddling with things that don't give us any real evidence - just get a good amount of data and go use it. 3-shot seating depth tests, 3-shot powder charge tests, 3-shot zero then trying to shoot long range and "true" BC or muzzle velocity - all are more likely a waste of ammo and time.
Note that also "gathering data from more shots" doesn't mean you have to go fire 10 rounds back-to-back if you're worried your rifle will "walk" or "open up" with that. Shoot 10 individual shots with complete cooling in between. Actually record where they fall and plot those relative to each other.
There are a series of good questions that arise from this thread that those who have an interest in gaining a clearer understanding of the technical aspects could empirically test with data for themselves, and the wider benefit of the community. Some of these that come to mind are:
- How consistent is the POI of a "cold bore" (fouled or clean) shot, and does a meaningful sample of these look any different from the dispersion of the same number of shots from warm barrels?
- Does barrel heat actually change the dispersion of your rifle system? Or is it simply that a larger number of shots gives a more true picture of the true dispersion?
- What is the actual precision capability of your rifle system? How well do groups of various sizes represent that?
- What is the actual velocity, and velocity variation of your rifle system?
- How well zeroed actually is your rifle?
I don't mind shooting a few rounds at the range to help build the knowledge of the community and I don't consider it a waste
I have spent enough time around shooters in situations like LR target shooting days to observe that the average shooter's self-assessment of their ability to hit things at longer ranges consistently is usually not based on much evidence, and is much higher than reality. Aside from shooter proficiency effects and junk gear, the next biggest issues are poor zero and poor data.
You are a reloading scientist gimp,well done.Im not,just a cold bore shooter.I just know hornady ammo,velocitys,drops and what my rifle can do out to 400yds.Its the repeatabilty iv had for the last 20yrs that helps me drop deer.
Sounds like a new hot opportunity for a new gizmo to market, an adjustable, portable and consistent barrel pre-heater, no more need for the first five shots in a ten-shot group.
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