Tim Singleton
Gold $$ Contributor
This is as true a statement as can be. I shot a screamer at riverbend last year small group for HV at 100. The targets were a 181 a 214 a 191 a screamer .098. Then guess what. The last target .378 big ugly group. Now if I had just know what was happening I could have done something right or wrong I could have done something. But I had no clue. My great load was now to hot. I came down a click for the next relay and did a little better.LHSmith said:I'm not Tim, so I hope you and he don't mind my post. It depends what your goal is? Do you want to shoot one small group (aka a screamer in a match)...or do you want to shoot well enough through the course of 5 matches to win the agg? A gun in true tune will shoot tiny triangular groups, a gun that just shot a group in the zero's is on the ragged edge of going out of tune, and when it looses tune the conditions have a profound effect (i.e. usually results in major group enlargement). Most matches the shooter who wins the agg is not the shooter who shot the screamer of the day. For some perspective - the record agg at 100 yds ( 5 five shot groups) is ~0.1242" while the record small group (5-shot) is 0.0077".gpoldblue said:To Tim.....If the load is shooting flat,then the horizontal "may" be caused by wind.....right? So you add vertical to the load...right? Well,how are you gonna shoot a 0.0xx" group with built in vertical?? Just asking. I'm still trying to learn. Thanks.
Also, horizontal can be load induced, specifically seat depth and/or neck tension.
When you shoot a screamer something bad is about to happen. If you are running hot you better back off. If your running a real light load better do something