C
cpeters
Guest
Jerry, I agree with you
I don't claim to be any kind of expert in this crowd, but I have found 2 things.
1. My main rifle seems to shoot Lapua at about 265 and Eley EPS at 250.
2. During a match, any time I ever changed the tuner, it was because I was grasping at an answer, I have always wound shooting a couple sighters and putting it right back where it was.
I too believe there are alot of rifles not shooting to thier potential for alot of reasons....tuning only being one.
I would be interested to hear what Harry and you Jerry have to say about tuning.
Most are not confident in themselves to be able to shoot and know if it was the wind, rifle tuning, or thier inability to judge conditions that made the shot go away from the rest.
What are your thoughts on a tuner setting that will make the rifle shoot one little hole yet another that is optimal for less movement in the wind. Do the two go hand in hand?
I personally am a believer that since you want that bullet to settle down just as soon as it leaves the muzzle that you should not overlook what is happening at short ranges.
Some will ask, so you mean to tell me that a bullet can be off at say 20 yards and somehow get back on course at 50 to shoot a good group? I say no, but everything I have been able to find in ballistics refers to a bullet leaving the muzzle traveling in a "helix" around the trajectory path that is wide as it leaves the muzzle and continuing to settle into the path of trajectory down range. I would expect this is what we call the bullet settling down.
Should we be working to tune this more towards the bench end of the range AND the target end? Do the two necessarily go hand in hand?
I'm interested in your thoughts on this and specifically if you were handed a new rifle that had never been tuned, and a dozen lots of ammo. What steps specifically would you take to have confidence you had wringed the first and last bit of accuracy with the combination you chose?
Thanks in advance.
Charlie Peters
Harry this was my point if all guns was tuned right and left alone we would see alot more higher scores and different winners.How can someone that has never shot there gun when it was tuned be able to figure out if it was the wind or the gun??? That would be like practicing(sp?) with wolf you wouldnt know if it was you or the ammo.I would venture to say 85% of the guns out there are good guns they just need tuned or just need good ammo.But then again what do I know Im just a dumb'ol Redneck Jerry
Ps. this is a killer thread!!
I don't claim to be any kind of expert in this crowd, but I have found 2 things.
1. My main rifle seems to shoot Lapua at about 265 and Eley EPS at 250.
2. During a match, any time I ever changed the tuner, it was because I was grasping at an answer, I have always wound shooting a couple sighters and putting it right back where it was.
I too believe there are alot of rifles not shooting to thier potential for alot of reasons....tuning only being one.
I would be interested to hear what Harry and you Jerry have to say about tuning.
Most are not confident in themselves to be able to shoot and know if it was the wind, rifle tuning, or thier inability to judge conditions that made the shot go away from the rest.
What are your thoughts on a tuner setting that will make the rifle shoot one little hole yet another that is optimal for less movement in the wind. Do the two go hand in hand?
I personally am a believer that since you want that bullet to settle down just as soon as it leaves the muzzle that you should not overlook what is happening at short ranges.
Some will ask, so you mean to tell me that a bullet can be off at say 20 yards and somehow get back on course at 50 to shoot a good group? I say no, but everything I have been able to find in ballistics refers to a bullet leaving the muzzle traveling in a "helix" around the trajectory path that is wide as it leaves the muzzle and continuing to settle into the path of trajectory down range. I would expect this is what we call the bullet settling down.
Should we be working to tune this more towards the bench end of the range AND the target end? Do the two necessarily go hand in hand?
I'm interested in your thoughts on this and specifically if you were handed a new rifle that had never been tuned, and a dozen lots of ammo. What steps specifically would you take to have confidence you had wringed the first and last bit of accuracy with the combination you chose?
Thanks in advance.
Charlie Peters