This may sound like an idiotic question, but humor me, there’s a practical use for the information.
My 7 mag has a decent barrel and snug no turn chamber and rarely shoots over 1/2moa. One year after backpacking in the snow and sleet for a few days I shot an elk, a couple hours later a decent buck stepped out into the edge of a big bowl - getting to a bit over 400 yards, some moisture in the bolt or trigger was frozen enough that ignition was too sluggish to fire until the 3rd attempt - in perfectly calm conditions with a very steady field rest (I watched a near perfect dry fire twice before the rifle went off), the shot was almost 2moa off. I got him, but had I know the gun was shooting way off it wouldn’t have been worth it. Had it been 500 yards, what should be a doable shot would have missed.
Has anyone purposely installed a super weak firing pin spring, or had a spring break, and tested just how bad their groups open up? I’ve wondered this for a number of years, but haven’t had a weak or spare spring fall in my lap yet to shoot some groups with. Crappy ignition in wet freezing conditions has happened once before this with a different rifle, and will probably happen again unless I turn into a fair weather hunter.
My 7 mag has a decent barrel and snug no turn chamber and rarely shoots over 1/2moa. One year after backpacking in the snow and sleet for a few days I shot an elk, a couple hours later a decent buck stepped out into the edge of a big bowl - getting to a bit over 400 yards, some moisture in the bolt or trigger was frozen enough that ignition was too sluggish to fire until the 3rd attempt - in perfectly calm conditions with a very steady field rest (I watched a near perfect dry fire twice before the rifle went off), the shot was almost 2moa off. I got him, but had I know the gun was shooting way off it wouldn’t have been worth it. Had it been 500 yards, what should be a doable shot would have missed.
Has anyone purposely installed a super weak firing pin spring, or had a spring break, and tested just how bad their groups open up? I’ve wondered this for a number of years, but haven’t had a weak or spare spring fall in my lap yet to shoot some groups with. Crappy ignition in wet freezing conditions has happened once before this with a different rifle, and will probably happen again unless I turn into a fair weather hunter.