I like one shot groups because the measurements look better.
Danny
NahWell if the 3rd is horizontal with the 1st 2 your at a place you need to be, providing the 1st 2 are not vertical.
Jim are you getting ready to shoot an OCW?
More is always better. That said, groups don’t get smaller by adding more shots. A smaller number per group will get you in a rough tune quickly. But if you want to discern a good load from a great one with any confidence, you’re going to have to shoot more than a five shot group to verify. You can take advantage of the fact that groups are not truly independent to help guide you and reduce round count. If you’ve got a huge group right next to a small one, there’s a good chance one of them is lying to you, for example.
Once I have narrowed in on the potential charge weight regions/nodes as you have, I typically use 0.1 gr increments to cover each window and 5-shot groups. 5-shot groups may be a little more informative statistically, even though 3-shot groups will usually tell you what you need to know. Where 5-shot groups really offer something more than 3-shot groups is in terms of the velocity data/statistics. Once you have identified the final load(s) you want to use, go back and "validate" them by shooting 3 to 5 5-shot groups to confirm that both precision and velocity remain consistent.
No, you are notAm I the only one who does 4-shot groups during initial OCW testing ???
I always do 4 shot OCW testing these loads fit my 20 round plastic boxes better for labeling.Am I the only one who does 4-shot groups during initial OCW testing ???
Group will never get smaller after the 2nd shot! All of my rifles and loads shoot 1 shot groups beautifully!
I keep hearing that horizontal is good and vertical is bad. I presume that reasoning is taking wind into account? Misread the wind and get more horizontal?
However if you have a head or following wind, won't that cause vertical?
I do 3 shots until I get something good, then I do 5 or more. Sometimes my 5 shot groups turn to patterns and I blame my technique or my inability to read the flags or my original load wasn't really that good. Does that happen to everybody.... or just me?
Bill
Not sure what is being said here. Head and tail winds have minimal impact ( as long as they don’t have vertical components).Yes, the assumption is that wind causes horizontal spread. That doesn't make sense to me either as I see as many headwinds and tailwinds as crosswinds. Not to mention those times where the wind flags are pointing at each other.
Not sure what is being said here. Head and tail winds have minimal impact ( as long as they don’t have vertical components).
I have 2 potential nodes im fleshing out. One range is somewhere in 41.3 - 41.9 and another in the 43.3-43.9 range. To really zero in, which option would you recommend?
.2 increments (4 groups of 3 shots = 24 total shots)
.2 increments (4 groups of 4 shots = 32 total shots)
41.3 | 41.5 | 41.7 | 41.9
43.3 | 43.5 | 43.7 | 43.9
.3 increments (3 groups of 5 shots = 30 total shots)
.3 increments (3 groups of 4 shots = 24 total shots)
.3 increments (3 groups of 3 shots = 18 total shots)
41.3 | 41.6 | 41.9
43.3 | 43.6 | 43.9