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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
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<blockquote data-quote="Buffalobob" data-source="post: 95254" data-attributes="member: 8"><p>Jimm is just happier than a pig in slop now you have given him the little roll a round on the floor guy. You should get him to send you a picture of his truck.</p><p></p><p> [ QUOTE ]</p><p> fired 1 shot at each target in succession. Shot 1 @ target 1, then shot 2 to target 2 and around and around till I ran out of loads. </p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>[/ QUOTE ] </p><p></p><p>Same issue with barrel. Almost no chance that the vertical stringing is random. What I have to do to get tight groups is wait almost 10 minutes between shots. At temeratures under 50 degrees you can probably get by with 5 minutes if you have a factory barrel (heavy barrel heats up slow but then stores it for a long time). If you are planning on using this gun for long range shooting at animals then the critical thing is to take at least an hour to shoot you base zero group of five rounds. This will ensure that the 0.25 MOA walking error is not transmitted down range. </p><p></p><p> I pretty much know that with my gun I get two shots to same point of impact and then things start going high and right in a hurry unless I let the barrel go back to stone cold. </p><p></p><p>Those are really nice groups nonetheless given the size of the projectile.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Buffalobob, post: 95254, member: 8"] Jimm is just happier than a pig in slop now you have given him the little roll a round on the floor guy. You should get him to send you a picture of his truck. [ QUOTE ] fired 1 shot at each target in succession. Shot 1 @ target 1, then shot 2 to target 2 and around and around till I ran out of loads. [/ QUOTE ] Same issue with barrel. Almost no chance that the vertical stringing is random. What I have to do to get tight groups is wait almost 10 minutes between shots. At temeratures under 50 degrees you can probably get by with 5 minutes if you have a factory barrel (heavy barrel heats up slow but then stores it for a long time). If you are planning on using this gun for long range shooting at animals then the critical thing is to take at least an hour to shoot you base zero group of five rounds. This will ensure that the 0.25 MOA walking error is not transmitted down range. I pretty much know that with my gun I get two shots to same point of impact and then things start going high and right in a hurry unless I let the barrel go back to stone cold. Those are really nice groups nonetheless given the size of the projectile. [/QUOTE]
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