To be upfront and completely in search of an answer with my posting here, yes I understand a 30BR is a very forgiving round and easy to tune for the most part but I wanted to take a closer look at just exactly how precise/accurately my 30BR has shot over the time frame of working with it. These groups do not represent the total number of groups fired since load work-up from time to time over the past two years and in variable weather conditions was done but it does represent group sizes from the variety of different loads developed with different powders, bullets, primers and seating depths - no tuner on this rifle. I did try one neck tension test with one particular bullet and found that a .324 bushing was what the rifle wanted to shoot with that bullet. However, from a search back thru my records I cannot find a group that measured more than .388 after caliber deduction even during load development. I am no BR shooter and this is by no means a bragging post of my ability to shoot since my bench technique probably lacks a lot to be desired most of the time, but if bragging rights come into play it would be solely a contribution to (WSMNUT) ODCR - Zack Donovant for his ability to build nice rifles that shoot for even for the novice. I suppose if I have a question of what could be gained from the list is - How Many Years and/or How Many More Shots/Groups Would It Require To Statistically Prove What MOA My Rifle Shoots and it would be fantastic if Brian Litz and/or Hornady could chime in with their opinions. Please express your opinions on the statistical facts as you see it as well.
The format below is group size, number of shots in group, powder & charge for each bullet listed. Most of the loads used CCI-BR4 primers.

The format below is group size, number of shots in group, powder & charge for each bullet listed. Most of the loads used CCI-BR4 primers.
