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Hunting
Long Range Hunting & Shooting
Rifle problem with groups
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<blockquote data-quote="Shooter98" data-source="post: 461830" data-attributes="member: 30040"><p>What works for me in those situations is the KISS method (keep. it. simple. silly.) </p><p> </p><p> I usually start at the optics. Is the rings still tight on the mount, is the mount still tight on the rifle? Then I move to loads. Am I using the same exact load that the scope is zero'd on. Next is the stock and barrel. Is the stock touching the barrel now in any way it wasn't before. Is the barrel still tight and not shifted in anyway. Usually by now I've found my culprit. Only once has it been a scope failure as usually it's something alot more simple like loose base mounts.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Shooter98, post: 461830, member: 30040"] What works for me in those situations is the KISS method (keep. it. simple. silly.) I usually start at the optics. Is the rings still tight on the mount, is the mount still tight on the rifle? Then I move to loads. Am I using the same exact load that the scope is zero'd on. Next is the stock and barrel. Is the stock touching the barrel now in any way it wasn't before. Is the barrel still tight and not shifted in anyway. Usually by now I've found my culprit. Only once has it been a scope failure as usually it's something alot more simple like loose base mounts. [/QUOTE]
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Rifle problem with groups
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