The CALIBER/CARTRIDGE a person shoots has a lot (NOT EVERYTHING) to do with what distance it will shoot it's best at.
If you are wanting to shoot 1000 yards, I suggest you don't shoot a .22 LR regardless of how well it shoots at 50 yards.
Also if you are looking for a caliber that does great at short range, say 100 or 200 yards, I suggest you NOT use a 300 Win Mag or 338 Lapua.
I disagree that if a cartridge shoots great at 100-300 yards, it will automatically shoot well at 1000.
That is NOT to say you can't shoot at 1000 with a .223, .22PPC or other small calibers, but don't expect to win much in benchrest competition.
Usually, people decide the distance they want to get superior performance at and THEN pick a cartridge/caliber that does that and has proven itself to accomplish that.
JMHO
If you are wanting to shoot 1000 yards, I suggest you don't shoot a .22 LR regardless of how well it shoots at 50 yards.
Also if you are looking for a caliber that does great at short range, say 100 or 200 yards, I suggest you NOT use a 300 Win Mag or 338 Lapua.
I disagree that if a cartridge shoots great at 100-300 yards, it will automatically shoot well at 1000.
That is NOT to say you can't shoot at 1000 with a .223, .22PPC or other small calibers, but don't expect to win much in benchrest competition.
Usually, people decide the distance they want to get superior performance at and THEN pick a cartridge/caliber that does that and has proven itself to accomplish that.
JMHO
Last edited: