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Hunting
Long Range Hunting & Shooting
Hunting Rifle MOA Rant
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<blockquote data-quote="86alaskan" data-source="post: 1489131" data-attributes="member: 75933"><p>I like to think that the "Good Enough" can be translated to adequate for the circumstances. As others have said, I've got rifles that hold .5 fairly well from prone or bench, and I've got MOA rifles that are great to hunt with. One in question is a 16" 460SW carbine. Is it a .5MOA rifle? not really, but I'm not using that rifle on bean fields, it gets carried on drives and while still hunting timber. It'll cut the strings on anything I see when I'm carrying it. I practice with all my hunting rifles and strive for the utmost accuracy, but when the rifle or the finger doesn't want to cooperate, I simply choose to limit my range. That doesn't mean that my good enough isn't that, it just means my definition is different. I don't think "good enough" is the same for everyone, as this thread has pretty plainly hashed out.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="86alaskan, post: 1489131, member: 75933"] I like to think that the "Good Enough" can be translated to adequate for the circumstances. As others have said, I've got rifles that hold .5 fairly well from prone or bench, and I've got MOA rifles that are great to hunt with. One in question is a 16" 460SW carbine. Is it a .5MOA rifle? not really, but I'm not using that rifle on bean fields, it gets carried on drives and while still hunting timber. It'll cut the strings on anything I see when I'm carrying it. I practice with all my hunting rifles and strive for the utmost accuracy, but when the rifle or the finger doesn't want to cooperate, I simply choose to limit my range. That doesn't mean that my good enough isn't that, it just means my definition is different. I don't think "good enough" is the same for everyone, as this thread has pretty plainly hashed out. [/QUOTE]
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