To shoot a 2500 in ARA, you must have a 25 shot group that is smaller than .276" CTC, and the group must be centered on the target. I have been using a new computer program that will scan a 25 shot target and then tell you what the 25 shot group size is as well as what the 5 shot group size is of each row. So, after shooting 1 target you have one 25 shot group size and five 5-Shot group sizes. It is extremely accurate. I have been using it for a few months now, and I have probably tested 30+ rifles with it. A very good rifle will shoot under .300 for 25 shots. The best rifle I have tested so far shot a .283" 25 shot group, I have only had 4 rifles shoot under .300". The best rifle did have a couple of 5 shot groups that were very small, but it is extremely difficult to do that 5 times in a row. I have the data in front of me from 1 rifle that shot a 25 shot group of .288".
1st Row was a 5-shot group of .288"
2nd was .160"
3rd was .129"
4th was .244"
5th was .160"
You have to remember that it only takes 1 bad shot to ruin a group. On this rifle, luckily the 2nd-5th groups were inside the first group. I have seen 2 different 5 shot groups be very small but when you overlap them, the cumulative 10 shot group is horrible. If 1 group has a point of impact to the left of the dot and the 2nd group has a point of impact to the right of the dot, you end up with a large 10-shot group.