Teemgeek, I may start another thread on theory of sub vs super. I don't want this thread to get off of good information about conditions shooting.
Refraction \mirage.
Low to no and indoor shooting sometimes is a humbling experience. There's times a person is not aiming at what they think they are. Going back to sighters is just a feeling at times.
Todd
Todd,
I'm sorry I got this off topic. But I do have something to say about sub/super ammo for rimfire.
I was part of the testing team when Federal was developing Federal Ultra Match UM1 .22 rimfire ammo.
They would send me various lots of ammo and I would shoot them and write a report on what I found.
I mostly shot the UM1 against Eley Benchrest Gold which was the ammo I was shooting then.
I shot after work mostly at night under lights. For a long time, I was really impressed with the UM1. So impressed I started using it in local matches on the weekend. That is when I found problems. At night in little to no wind the UM1 shot great but when the wind got up it was very hard to predict. So, I quit making reports on ammo I shot at night and only reported what I shot when there were conditions.
Didn't take long for my contact at Federal to call me and ask what was happening. Thier results and my results on the same lots were very different. I told them I couldn't get it to shoot in the wind. After a couple of arguments, I among others finally convinced them to do some shooting outdoors in the wind.
Long story short, the ammo was supersonic. That made the ammo venerable to deflection when it was in an unstable condition. The problem was they didn't know how to slow it down without killing ignition.
It has long been known in centerfire it is desirable to have the case full of powder and not have a lot of empty space. In a rimfire there is only a tiny amount of powder a lot of empty space. They tried filling and packing the cases with various things, but the plug got pulled by the company before it was completely perfected.
Federal perfected the most common problems we have today with ammo and that is consistency. The cases were nearly perfect. The rim thickness was .042 all day long. The dimpled case head made sure the primer was only in the rim and not splashed over the center. The bullets were beautiful. The driving bands were not deformed and were nearly always the same length. You don't see that in current ammo.
UM1 was the way forward for RFBR accuracy but I'm afraid it has been lost forever.
If the ammo is of the same consistence, I would choose the slower ammo.
TKH