M
murphy
Guest
Have just completed a series of tests, with my Armi San Marco 22Hornet and made a few discoveries that may be of interest to the Hornet people. Firstly my rifle is a miniture Fraser falling block replica, it looks just like a Ruger #1 but the action is only half as big. It has a #3 profile 231/2" barrel half octagnal and half round. What I was trying to understand was why Hornet rifles can give top accuracy one day and poor accuracy the next, and have drawn a few conclusions. My conclusion is that quality control of handloads is the key, and that uneven seating depth is the single greatest destroyer of accuracy as the Hornet has a tiny and unforgiving accuracy window as compared to a 222Rem. or a 308. My tests showed me that a seating depth change of .010" can double group size, but as long as tolerences were kept to a minimum, accuracy was indeed repeatable. Another strange thing about my rifle is that it seems to have a false accuracy window as well as the true one. When bullets are seated .118" off the lands accuracy comes back to .3" for 3 shots at 50yds which is the same accuracy as .01 jam. When I tried 5 shot groups at 100yds, the one on jam shot .736" and the other seating depth shot 1.473". I thought it was an abberation so I tested a different bullet weight and the false accuracy window appeared just as before.If any body can explain or has experienced this, I would love to hear from them