Alex Wheeler
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Over the years I have described my tuning method as 1k ladder testing or 3 shot ladders. I think that has led to some confusion for those trying to follow the method, because any other information you will gather on a ladder with be a true ladder. The method I use is actually just 3 shot groups. I shoot them all at one time, as groups, and quickly at the same aim point. This helps get them all down in one condition. You could shoot them at different aim points and get the same data but that would slow you down and take up a large target. You read the target the same way no matter what method you use, your looking at group size, shape, and position on the target relative to the other groups. I do not use single shot, true ladders, except on sporter weight barrels to rough in, and then I follow up with 3 shot groups. I see guys shooting single shot ladders at closer ranges, and in many cases they are totally unreadable, but it seems like any time a ladder is shot guys will have to pick a load from it no matter what rather than tossing the whole thing. I know it has caused a lot of tail chasing. Theres a pattern we are looking for when it comes to poi shift on target and random is not it. In some cases a single shot ladder will print text book and its usable. That will only happen if you got lucky and gave it the right powder, bullet, primer, and where really close on seating depth and the rifle has to be very accurate. I never recommend a ladder for factory rifles, or for someone not very confident in their shooting. The point I am trying to make is that 2 or 3 shots landing near each other could have easily been the high and low shots of vertical loads, had you shot a couple more you would have seen all the vertical.