This is a thread I like.
I am tired of persons who assert that their rifle shoots one-hole groups every group, and every trip to the range.
How about wind? You can correct for wind . . . to a point. When you have a gusty, erratic wind that shifts around the compass, it is going to move the .224 bullets. Nonetheless, the claims come in, "my rifle shoots amazing groups time after time, and day after day after day."
One wise old guy who competes wrote to me that a 200 yd event had been won with a plus one-minute group on a particular, windy day. Not that good, but others were worse. What happened to the blowhards with their boasting on that particular day?
Another guy that ticked me off . . . . some months ago I posted a couple of nice targets with my varminter. He wrote back, "don't think you can claim that as a quarter-minute gun." First off, I never claimed anything such. Second off, I don't care the claims, but darn few shooters can grind out one hole groups time after time, regardless of wind or "too much coffee" or . . . what have you.
One guy wrote, he would only believe some of this bull if the shooting was done as part of a competition, and the targets were certified.
I am very satisfied with my particular rifle. I am pretty sure when I blow out a group with a flyer or two, it is "the nut behind the gun" and not my barrel that has screwed up.
So -- blowhards -- just keep making those extravagant claims.
Of course, here I am not talking about full bench rifles, just my own category -- which is varminters. Similar observations might hold true with full bench competition rifles-- I just don't know much about competition bench rifles. I DO have some idea what to expect from varminters.