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I never have seen a group get any better then the second shot . Regardless how many others you shoot. LarryTo save on barrel life. Shoot 2 shot groups. If any look promising shot 3 more. If the group does not look good after 2 shots they won't look good after 5. And yes a chrony is worth every penny for load development.
I never have seen a group get any better then the second shot . Regardless how many others you shoot. Larry
To save on barrel life. Shoot 2 shot groups. If any look promising shot 3 more. If the group does not look good after 2 shots they won't look good after 5. And yes a chrony is worth every penny for load development.
I never have seen a group get any better then the second shot . Regardless how many others you shoot. Larry
I have quite a few groups with 2-3 shots in a single hole with the other two causing the group to be 1-2MOA!
I've never had a problem where my rifle would shoot 2-3 in the same hole then open up to that size group and i knew it wasn't me pulling the shot... And i was sure my equipment was in good order.
At 100 yards I've have over 75fps of velocity spread and still put them in the same hole.
Your groups vertical or horizontal when they open up?
Vertical that is what bullet speed does .I've never had a problem where my rifle would shoot 2-3 in the same hole then open up to that size group and i knew it wasn't me pulling the shot... And i was sure my equipment was in good order.
At 100 yards I've have over 75fps of velocity spread and still put them in the same hole.
Your groups vertical or horizontal when they open up?
2 MOA was off. Those were 200yds groups. So I'm getting 2-3 bullets in a single hole, while shoot 3/4 to 1 1/4 MOA groups. There is a lot of 3-1-1 and 2-2-1.
Mostly vertical.
First I fire-formed 20 pcs of brass and shot about 1" groups during barrel break-in. Then, roughly following Berger's seating depth test(two three shot groups at jammed, .040" jump and .080" jump, because I only had 20 cases) with the SII 4-16 mounted, three shot groups at 100yds ranged from .536" to 1.431", but only one group went under .810". I performed a ladder test and thought I identified two nodes. NO groups were much under 1", I left the target at the range and didn't measure cause it looked like crap. I switched to a T-6, shot four five shot groups at three different seating depths, thought I found a good rough seating range, switched back to the Sightron SII and shot groups at 200 yds measuring 1.270", 2.226", and 1.657".
The four groups with the T-6 were .771"(jammed), .714"(jumping .40"), .486"(jumping .120") and at 200yds .888" or about .44 MOA(also jumping .120") . I skipped .080" because it performed so poorly with the SII when I did the three shot group seating depth tests. I figured .120" was the right seating depth.
This morning I assumed I had a good starting point on seating depth, mounted the SII again, and shot the three previously mentioned groups. 1.270"(jumping .105"), 2.226"(jumping .120") and 1.657"(jumping .135"). I would have fooled with powder charge but I'm considering a switch in brass manufacture, and figured that I could just generate some confidence in the brand new SII and see which direction to head when fine tuning seating depth.
Could I be right on a scatter node with the powder and would a scatter node cause this three in two out stuff? I did the seating depth test with what I thought was a mild load, and there are no pressure signs, but at .120" jump the base of the bullet is well below the neck and you can hear it crunching powder when you seat a bullet.
The Norma brass, of which I now have 18 pcs, was simply trimmed to length and loaded up. The 140pcs of RWS has been trimmed to length, had primer pockets uniformed, necks turned, and is waiting to be weight sorted. It has considerably less case capacity and thus I wanted some Norma brass in case I failed to achieve the desired velocity(measured by sighting in at 200, then firing groups at 100 and 500 and measuring POI). Because my hunt is looming and I wanted to get the gun shooting, I opted to simply start shooting the Norma brass and worry about the RWS brass later. The drop from 100 to 200 suggests velocity is in the desired range and the soft Norma brass is bugging me, so I'm now wanting to go ahead and use the RWS brass if I manage to get the time. Is there any chance that the brass being unsorted could be the culprit? I can't say I ever shot unsorted brass in a gun that I wanted to be accurate, but I've read of enough guys saying that they don't do it that I figured I could get away with it.
I suggest that with our 200.20X Hybrid Target or any BERGER Hybrid Target bullet that you start your bullet seating depth testing at .015 OFF THE LANDS. Then work back into the cartridge case in .005 increments to find your bullet seating depth accuracy node. Any bullet seating depth testing should be done at the lowest powder charge listed for the bullet/powder/cartridge combination you are testing. If you have any questions please feel free to contact us here. Or at techsupport@bergerbullets.com
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Take care,
Depending on my goal, this particular seating test might lead to doing some fine tuning tests of the seating depth between .005" jump and .015" jump. Or I might call .010" good and move on to fine tuning a charge weight test, a neck tension test, or a comparison test between two different kinds of primers.
The point is that you can't really decide where to go unless you first know where you are at the moment. The best path can usually be found by carefully gathering data and studying it carefully to learn what it's telling you. Then you can isolate a different parameter and test it based on your previous knowledge which should be a solid jumping off place, not for example some shaky batch of data gathered when you used a scope which you can't trust.