dbooksta said:Interesting, I'll run the windage sensitivities tomorrow.
You will find that failing to account for even 1-2mph wind is enough to make groups uncompetitive, especially at 200.
Are these statements as applicable for the 100-200yard range? Obviously I'm unfamiliar with the sport, but I do recall reading once that at least some top benchrest shooters wait for calm/stable conditions and then try to get off the full string as fast as possible, and that 1 shot per second is not an unusual rate of fire.
Many top shooters are machine-gunners, but even then they are often holding into a changing condition and using each shot as a sighter for the next while reading the flags. A real "runner" can get off 5 shots in about 10sec.
If conditions are still a factor at short range is the dispersion of groups predominantly along the horizontal axis?
Horizontal stringing ("weather report") is common among less experienced/talented shooters, but most competitive groups are round. Some top shooters will deliberately add a little bit of vertical to their tune if that makes the load less wind-sensitive.
(I assume stdev of muzzle velocities is near or in single digits, and there are no other primary factors contributing to vertical spread.)
Muzzle velocity variation matters very little at 100-200, as you will see if you plug the numbers into a ballistics program. I've never met anybody who measures it or cares about it in point-blank BR.
It's important to remember that a very small differences in an agg can move you many places in the standings of a big BR shoot. A few thousandths of an inch often separate first place from tenth. To win at a big shoot you need a good barrel, good bullets, great tune, great technique, and great condition reading skills.