I reloaded for hunting ( more different cartridges/ calibers than I can remember) and informal target (.222 mostly) for 35 years before building my first truly accurate rifle....a 6 PPC LV benchrest 12 years ago. Before the PPC custom ,I could shoot small groups one session and not so great groups the next time out. It was not until I started shooting competition that I started to learn what it takes to keep a rifle in tune through various conditions.......and that you will not shoot dots everytime out no matter what you do......But you can learn to keep the groups small with few fliers (which you can usually explain.....i.e a switch, trigger control, bag position). As a matter of fact , Shooting zeros or ones indicates the load is on the extreme edge of tune....and unlikely to win the agg (i.e. match). I learned about shooting over windflags, monitoring RH during loading, learning where to hold in a mirage( heavy or barely discernable), consistent and proper form in holding the rifle, using a shooting platform that minimizes shooter influence, cold bore shots vs. the 10th shot out of a hot barrel.......all of which lead to TRUST in the rifle. Bottom line is I learned more in one year shooting competition than in all the 35 years previous.
My advice: Take the PPC and develop a load that works in a certain condition to where it is boringly repeatable, and experiment making subtle changes one at a time..... learn from what it tells you it likes... and take lots of notes You should end up saving a lot of components and barrels in the long term.
My advice: Take the PPC and develop a load that works in a certain condition to where it is boringly repeatable, and experiment making subtle changes one at a time..... learn from what it tells you it likes... and take lots of notes You should end up saving a lot of components and barrels in the long term.