Tom R,
Earlier this year my Turbo was shooting awesome. That gun would agg. nearly 2300 (ARA) over 6 targets in ideal conditions. Then all of a sudden, I could not shoot over a 2100. It did not shoot horrible, but all of my scores were 2000 to 2100 no matter what the conditions were. I checked everything I could think of and it turned out to be the firing pin. The firing pin tip had "mushroomed". It did not have the hard crisp edges that it once had. Looking at my fired brass, you could not tell any difference. That gun drove me crazy for about a month. It made me a believer about ignition being critical. We have since replaced the firing pin. Now the gun is back to about 90% of were it was. We are still tinkering with it. It seems now the firing pin hits a little too hard. I can feel, hear, and see the vibrations that Fred J was talking about. The gun is much better than with the bad firing pin, but not as good as it originally was.
"How do you tell if you have bad ignition?" Look at firing pin to make sure it is shaped properly and not "mushroomed", look at fired brass to make sure the pin strike is hitting hard and it is hitting the rim. You want it to hit the rim, this is where the primer is located. Also, how is the gun shooting. When mine had poor ignition, I would get an unexplained 25. Then the next 3-4 shots would take the dot out, then another 25. The final proof for me on poor ignition with my Turbo, I used a bolt from another Turbo that was smithed by Myers just like my Turbo. When I used the different bolt, the gun was back to her old self and shooting great.