Thank you all so much.
I must be going blind, lolThe OP stated benchrest.
Great question and one I have been asking myself. I shot my first local match a few months ago. There is a lots going on that you have to be on top of.I really want to get into competitive benchrest shooting but I have no idea what good MOA's are from 500 yards and beyond.
Thanks all.
Thanks for the link. I have zero experience interpreting these results, but at a few of the 1000y competitions I looked at the light gun aggs were better than the heavy gun aggs. Is this common? Is it due to competitors putting more time and money into light guns? For some reason I always thought the heavy guns had the most potential for smaller aggs.Here is a link to the 600/1000 yard Benchrest results. That should give you an idea. The level of competitiveness can vary depending on the ease or difficulty of the conditions on a given day. If you come across low scores and high Aggs, it likely indicates a challenging day at the range.
Long Range Results
internationalbenchrest.com
Light gun is 5 shots. Heavy gun is ten shots. Shots for record are shot blind. Meaning all your record shots are fired in succession without feed back.Thanks for the link. I have zero experience interpreting these results, but at a few of the 1000y competitions I looked at the light gun aggs were better than the heavy gun aggs. Is this common? Is it due to competitors putting more time and money into light guns? For some reason I always thought the heavy guns had the most potential for smaller aggs.
I ask, because eventually I'll build one of these types of guns. But my finances will only be able to afford 1.
Ahh! that makes total sense. Thank you. That makes those 1000y groups and aggs super impressiveLight gun is 5 shots. Heavy gun is ten shots. Shots for record are shot blind. Meaning all your record shots are fired in succession without feed back.
At 600 yards both LG and HG are 5 Shots.Ahh! that makes total sense. Thank you. That makes those 1000y groups and aggs super impressive
Mr Wick,Here is a link to the 600/1000 yard Benchrest results. That should give you an idea. The level of competitiveness can vary depending on the ease or difficulty of the conditions on a given day. If you come across low scores and high Aggs, it likely indicates a challenging day at the range.
Long Range Results
internationalbenchrest.com
If you are limited to one rifle make it LG. You can then shoot light and heavy class.Thanks for the link. I have zero experience interpreting these results, but at a few of the 1000y competitions I looked at the light gun aggs were better than the heavy gun aggs. Is this common? Is it due to competitors putting more time and money into light guns? For some reason I always thought the heavy guns had the most potential for smaller aggs.
I ask, because eventually I'll build one of these types of guns. But my finances will only be able to afford 1.
Best reply out there. Your reward is having the fun trying, because why else do it then.Short answer ---.3 to .4 MOA at 500-1,000 yards would make you very competitive and a winner.
Easy? Just try it at distance. Your reward is having the fun trying.