TheOtherZilla
Pull my finger
All of mine are "one hole shooters" as well. If I only shoot them once!
I kinda asked for that. But you get my drift.. 1 shot, 1 hole, 1 dead pdawg.. Unless the bullet decides to go AWOL
All of mine are "one hole shooters" as well. If I only shoot them once!
I kinda asked for that. But you get my drift.. 1 shot, 1 hole, 1 dead pdawg.. Unless the bullet decides to go AWOL
The smaller you can get the rifle to agg at 100 yds (in different conditions one can reasonably expect to encounter) chances are the greater the stability which will pay dividends at longer ranges. Testing in various conditions is the important part....too many only do their load development in dead calm.Really, 1/2"?? That sounds nice, but there have been more dead dogs created by far less accurate rifles than 1/2" guns. Everyone loves that 5 in a half inch, but very few have them. I would bet that 90% of guns shooting pd's are out of the box guns. a 53 grain Vmax that leaves the barrel at 3300 fps., will have .9" of wind drift per m.p.h. of wind. From 275yds to 300 yds., that same bullet will drop another 1.9", or basically .1" per yard, ya I know, not quite. My point is, if you can't judge wind to that last 1 m.p.h., and with swirling winds in the pastures, I am guessing not many can, and if you don't have a rangefinder that is always accurate to within a yard, the advantage of a 1/2" gun compared to a 1" gun pretty much go out the window. Increasing the velocity to 3500 fps will in effect make a 3/4" gun equal to a 1/2" gun at 300yds in the same wind conditions. This also makes low e.s. loads more important at longer ranges, and in some cases will again be more important than the last 1/8" in the group. Flame ON!! FYI all my guns will shoot under 1/2" all day long!!!!!, well not quite, but a few do,.... sometimes.
Sorry not for sale.. But it does shoot rather well.. Browning Buckmark stainless 7-1/2" Bbl. 1 shot, 1 hole..I'd be interested in that 22 pistol that shoots one hole.
"1 shot, 1 hole"Sorry not for sale.. But it does shoot rather well.. Browning Buckmark stainless 7-1/2" Bbl. 1 shot, 1 hole..
Sorry not for sale.. But it does shoot rather well.. Browning Buckmark stainless 7-1/2" Bbl. 1 shot, 1 hole..
Hey guys, I love shooting Prairie Dogs. It's my favorite thing to do in the summer. What is your maximum acceptable group size for a P dog load? pics welcome!
The most important "things" being knowing how your rifle shoots in conditions, learning how to read condition via mirage, and knowing where to hold to compensate.So the moral of the story is that when out in the field shooting they are a lot more important things than the difference between a 1/2 inch and a 1 inch rifle.
drover
My standards must be lower. To me a 3 shot groups tells me how well those 3 shots grouped. When I develop loads, I use the OCW method to get started. Then I come back and fire 5 shot groups. From those I fire 10 shot groups and those are what I call how my rifle shoots. I'm happy when my PD rifles group under 1". Some shoot better, some a little worse. The rifles I use on PD's aren't my best or most accurate.
When in the field, accurately ranging the distance and if the wind isn't a significant factor, my hit percentage is really good. My best day was 214 dogs with 218 shots. Yes I missed more than 4, but a few double and triples helped out. When the wind really picks up, I'm closer to 50% on hits. And when I shift rifles between one that groups 0.625" or 1.250", I don't find any difference in my hit percentage. I shot over 4300 PD's last year, so I do shoot a few.
I wish my rifles grouped like those I read about. Maybe I use a different basis to call what my rifle groups?