Alex Wheeler
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I want to stir the pot a little on this discussion. To ad another point of view to the discussion around statistics. Lately theres been a lot of talk about what is statistically relevant when it comes to testing things or tuning a rifle. Most of the stuff I have seen comes from people with a scientific background. I wanted to ad a point of view from a background of building rifles that have to win matches and shoot the smallest aggs possible.
In my opinion, we want to tune a barrel in the least statistically relevant way possible SO LONG as it produces results. If I could tune a barrel in 5 shots and go break a record and win matches consistently with that method it would be the best tuning method there is. But also the least likely to stand up to scientific scrutiny.
The reality is that none of my tuning methods, or any of the methods used by my customers to win or break records would be considered statistically relevant. It blows my mind when I read some of this stuff. We have to test powders, primers, neck tension, seating depth, tuner test, ext. There are ways to do this with only a small sampling. When I am starting with a new rifle and I want to try 3 or 4 different powders, it only takes about 10 shots to know if that barrel likes that powder or not. Same goes for primers. Group size is another thing. 3-5 shot groups are not relevant? I dont have enough fingers and toes to count the records that say they are. What are we trying to do? Tune a rifle or create data?
What I am trying to stop is the guy that calls and says he is struggling to tune his rifle, hes shot a ton of groups. Piled up plenty of statistically relevant data, but has only tried one powder, one bullet, and one primer, and now has his barrel 1/3 shot out because he would not make decisions based on a small sampling.
In my opinion, we want to tune a barrel in the least statistically relevant way possible SO LONG as it produces results. If I could tune a barrel in 5 shots and go break a record and win matches consistently with that method it would be the best tuning method there is. But also the least likely to stand up to scientific scrutiny.
The reality is that none of my tuning methods, or any of the methods used by my customers to win or break records would be considered statistically relevant. It blows my mind when I read some of this stuff. We have to test powders, primers, neck tension, seating depth, tuner test, ext. There are ways to do this with only a small sampling. When I am starting with a new rifle and I want to try 3 or 4 different powders, it only takes about 10 shots to know if that barrel likes that powder or not. Same goes for primers. Group size is another thing. 3-5 shot groups are not relevant? I dont have enough fingers and toes to count the records that say they are. What are we trying to do? Tune a rifle or create data?
What I am trying to stop is the guy that calls and says he is struggling to tune his rifle, hes shot a ton of groups. Piled up plenty of statistically relevant data, but has only tried one powder, one bullet, and one primer, and now has his barrel 1/3 shot out because he would not make decisions based on a small sampling.