Keith, I'm on my phone and cant type a long and detailed answer right now, but lots of your questions have been addressed in other posts in this thread. I'm happy to help if you want to call tomorrow.--Mike Ezell
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Busdriver said:I want to re-ask a question prior because I didn't get the info I was hoping for -
I'll make a stab at this.
If you have a rifle that is/was shooting well and it starts to produce vertical, which way do you turn the tuner? The reason I ask is during an unlimited sighter period, one could make an adjustment to perfect the tune.
If the temp goes up turn the tuner out, if the temp goes down turn it in....tiny increments.
Would you turn the opposite direction for if you had Horizontal?
Going in the opposite direction will just screw up your horizontal
- My experience is, the tuner affects vertical. Horizontal iscontrolled by seating depth
Is there a consistent pattern to the groups as the tuner is turned? I mean horizontal then scatter then vertical then perfect, etc.
Is there a consistent pattern to your groups before you installed a tuner? In my experience, all a tuner will do is give you a tool to control vertical, nothing more.
Last one - I almost promise - Has anyone been able to determine if there is a difference in absolute precision between "tuned" with the tuner nearly against the shoulder and, say, two turns out? I understand that it is a repeating pattern, but is there any appreciable difference?
I've not found one, but then once I find a good location I work from there.
My tuner experience is rather limited with one barrel that has a Cortina tuner on it. The next barrel (at the smith right now) will have an Ezell tuner on it.
The Ezell tuner may be easier to adjust or may have a wider tune window. Other than that, they all work the same. A tuner is a tuner is a tuner.
YMMV,
Rick
Thanks!
Keith
savagedasher said:Keith t will try to answer the question. Their is no certain direction you turn one . Tuner work in a square pattern. Lets start with a straight up and down vertical. shooting two shots. Then you move it say 10 degrees and it ends up being straight horizontal. Another 10 and it repeats back vertical another 10 another 10 it is horizontal. Saying every 10 degrees it changes V 10 H 10 V 10 H.
V H
H V 5 degrees of turn should be the point to where the barrel is aimed at when the bullet exits the barrel . When you shoot 2 shots it tell you from the first and second shot which way it is trending above or below or R or L the point of aim. 10 degrees is just a number. Half that is would be a closer number, Many of tunes are done in.010 or less movement on a 1 .500 Tuning ring
I hope that helps
The reason I use just two shots it tells me the way the pattern is trending from the point of aim.
Larry
JamesnTN said:I understand how you can see the difference and make adjustments in short range BR but at LR we don't have that option to shoot a group before the match or during sight in and make adjustments because we can't see our bullet holes. So guessing at 600-1000 yards on turning in or out in my opinion is out of the question. Plus I can't seeing making a tune anyhow for those ranges if you can see say .300 verticle at 100-300 yards with just the finest adjustment that really multiplies when you get to 1000 yards. So much you may have a DQ
I'm just talking out loud here so forgive me.
Greyfox said:It does take a while to find the tune initially, but after that, noting the temp, it's pretty easy to tune at the beginning and during a match. The simple rules to follow are if the temp goes up the tuner moves in and if the temp goes down the tuner moves out. Adjustments are tiny, a small as 1/16" turn or less in most cases. I have found that the vertical is handled by the tuner and the horizontal is changed by adjusting seating depth.
Greyfox said:If the temp goes up turn the tuner out, if the temp goes down turn it in....tiny increments.
I have 3 Rim fire bench rest 2 Center fire bench rest and 5 long range bench rest guns. My primary shooting I do 600 and 1000 paper and 1018 yd gong. I have the record at 600 yard paper with 1.068 5 shot. I normal finish in the top 3 at 1018 gong shoots. I finished second in two of the 3 Florida State gong shoots. I do all my testing at 100 yards. When test I shoot two shots. When I get them in one hole. I do 10 or more two shots targets, I then go to fresh painted 8''gong at 1018 . I can see my bullet impact on the fresh painted surface. When I miss I can see the impact in the dirt.Greyfox said:savagedasher said:Keith t will try to answer the question. Their is no certain direction you turn one . Tuner work in a square pattern. Lets start with a straight up and down vertical. shooting two shots. Then you move it say 10 degrees and it ends up being straight horizontal. Another 10 and it repeats back vertical another 10 another 10 it is horizontal. Saying every 10 degrees it changes V 10 H 10 V 10 H.
V H
H V 5 degrees of turn should be the point to where the barrel is aimed at when the bullet exits the barrel . When you shoot 2 shots it tell you from the first and second shot which way it is trending above or below or R or L the point of aim. 10 degrees is just a number. Half that is would be a closer number, Many of tunes are done in.010 or less movement on a 1 .500 Tuning ring
I hope that helps
The reason I use just two shots it tells me the way the pattern is trending from the point of aim.
Larry
Larry,
I don't know what distance you are shooting or the accuracy of your rifles. But, my experience in 100-300 yd BR is significantly different from yours. If I was getting the kind of results you report I would know that my seating depth was not properly tuned. My tuners will only change vertical tune if the seating depth is correct. Also, a two shot group would not necessarily show a true picture. Many times two shots will go in the same hole and the third will go one bullet high or low. The tune is much easier to see with a 3 or even 4 shot group.
YMMV,
Rick
savagedasher said:I have 3 Rim fire bench rest 2 Center fire bench rest and 5 long range bench rest guns. My primary shooting I do 600 and 1000 paper and 1018 yd gong. I have the record at 600 yard paper with 1.068 5 shot. I normal finish in the top 3 at 1018 gong shoots. I finished second in two of the 3 Florida State gong shoots. I do all my testing at 100 yards. When test I shoot two shots. When I get them in one hole. I do 10 or more two shots targets, I then go to fresh painted 8''gong at 1018 . I can see my bullet impact on the fresh painted surface. When I miss I can see the impact in the dirt.Greyfox said:savagedasher said:Keith t will try to answer the question. Their is no certain direction you turn one . Tuner work in a square pattern. Lets start with a straight up and down vertical. shooting two shots. Then you move it say 10 degrees and it ends up being straight horizontal. Another 10 and it repeats back vertical another 10 another 10 it is horizontal. Saying every 10 degrees it changes V 10 H 10 V 10 H.
V H
H V 5 degrees of turn should be the point to where the barrel is aimed at when the bullet exits the barrel . When you shoot 2 shots it tell you from the first and second shot which way it is trending above or below or R or L the point of aim. 10 degrees is just a number. Half that is would be a closer number, Many of tunes are done in.010 or less movement on a 1 .500 Tuning ring
I hope that helps
The reason I use just two shots it tells me the way the pattern is trending from the point of aim.
Larry
Larry,
I don't know what distance you are shooting or the accuracy of your rifles. But, my experience in 100-300 yd BR is significantly different from yours. If I was getting the kind of results you report I would know that my seating depth was not properly tuned. My tuners will only change vertical tune if the seating depth is correct. Also, a two shot group would not necessarily show a true picture. Many times two shots will go in the same hole and the third will go one bullet high or low. The tune is much easier to see with a 3 or even 4 shot group.
YMMV,
Rick
I make my own test target with a series of + + on it . 10 2 shot targets Gives me more information then 4 5 shot. The reason being I can get two in around 10 seconds, If my 10 2 shot are .250 or less And the Gong has paint above and below the bolt in the center I know I have a load that shoot at 100 and 1018 . That is how I test It works for me. Happy New Year Larry
savagedasher said:I have 3 Rim fire bench rest 2 Center fire bench rest and 5 long range bench rest guns. My primary shooting I do 600 and 1000 paper and 1018 yd gong. I have the record at 600 yard paper with 1.068 5 shot. I normal finish in the top 3 at 1018 gong shoots. I finished second in two of the 3 Florida State gong shoots. I do all my testing at 100 yards. When test I shoot two shots. When I get them in one hole. I do 10 or more two shots targets, I then go to fresh painted 8''gong at 1018 . I can see my bullet impact on the fresh painted surface. When I miss I can see the impact in the dirt.
I make my own test target with a series of + + on it . 10 2 shot targets Gives me more information then 4 5 shot. The reason being I can get two in around 10 seconds, If my 10 2 shot are .250 or less And the Gong has paint above and below the bolt in the center I know I have a load that shoot at 100 and 1018 . That is how I test It works for me. Happy New Year Larry
I've never seen what you describe with any tuner. Perhaps I'm misunderstanding something, or maybe it's specific to you tuner. When you get around to it, could you expound upon this. I'm sure it's because I'm just too dense to get what you are saying, but I've never seen a tuner, with a good load, produce wide, flat groups that weren't wind or shooter induced. ??? I've got very little experience with a tuner such as yours, that doesn't add mass to the end of the barrel..perhaps that's where it comes from.Erik Cortina said:First of all, happy new year's to all of you.
Which way to turn a tuner if vertical is encountered?
It depends where the tuner is. During testing, you will see that groups are wide and flat on one side of your node and narrow and tall on the other side. If you see vertical, turn tuner towards the flat and wide side. On my tuners, I find that about 1 hashmark makes a difference. If my load is performing bad, I shoot 5 shots and adjust 2 marks on tuner and take another 3-5 shots. I do this until load comes in. I can usually tune a load in about 10-12 shots during unlimited sighters.
UltraBR30 said:To Erik Cortina
How many marks on yours to make 1-revolution?
Philip