again I ask if short barrels are better then why do the long range shooters shoot long barrels?
Surely you don't believe they don't know what they are doing. 1.5 inch 5 shot group at 1000 yrds. 3" groups pretty common. barrels 28" and longer.
There are several flaws in your logic. For one, you resort to the
argumentum ad verecundiam ("appeal to authority") fallacy. It's akin to saying "97% of climate scientists agree that
primarily mankind is warming the planet, therefore it
must be true." **
Also, your assertion postulates that 100% of the long-range BR competitors
everywhere shoot long barrels (there are almost certainly at least a few who do not, and with some success).
But, more critically, it postulates that essentially
all long-range shooters have actually evaluated, and rejected as inferior, a 21.75" barrel. It's very likely (given the herd mentality endemic in benchrest shooting) that few of them has even bothered to
try a short barrel.
I'm
not saying a short barrel is better than a long one in long-range competition. I'm just pointing out that the scarcity of short barrels doesn't
ipso facto prove they're inferior. I suppose if you're shooting a cartridge with enough powder capacity to take advantage of it, and if only very high muzzle velocity can be competitive, maybe a 30-inch barrel is needed to eke out those last 75 fps.
Is top velocity the main component of long-range success in your opinion? Can modest cartridges like 6.5 Creedmore not compete at 1000 yards? (These are honest questions.)
[** Even if 97% of climate scientist really
do agree (they don't, actually) that mere fact alone doesn't validate the hypothesis of AGW. That's not the way real science works. In fact, telling any
real scientist that there exists near total consensus that a chaotic, multivariate non-linear system as vast and complex as global climate is not only well understood but is actually
predictable, decades out, would (behind closed doors, anyway) elicit paroxysms of laughter.]
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