Jackie, the feature appeared in the daily bulletin:
http://www.6mmbr.com/bulletin.html .
Jackie, please note the claim was NOT made that the gun would Agg in the ones or zeros in registered benchrest competition. Larry has asserted that his gun has shot 5-shot groups in the ones, with at least one zero group. He has the targets to prove it.
You yourself have shot some stellar groups with long bullets. I know because you faxed me the targets from your 6BR rail gun tests. I don't consider it "absurd" to suggest this level of accuracy is possible with long bullets. Don Nielson says his 6.5x47 shoots "in the ones" at 100 yards, and that is with long Berger VLDs. Don won a few matches (including the 600-yard Nationals) with that rig so maybe his claim is not "absurd." Nor do I feel that my intelligence was insulted when Don told me his gun shoots "in the ones". And I believed, at face value, when Tim North told me that kind of one-group accuracy is "definitely doable" with a 6.5x284. Talk to Tim. His number is: 1.920.922.4882
Again, no one is claiming that the gun will Agg in the ones in competition -- we all know that is a different thing entirely because of the many variables involved. But I don't think it is crazy to think that a 17+ lb gun, with rails, and a 5" wide foreend and 2.5" wide toe, in ideal conditions, can shoot a group in the ones. Talk to Tim North. He says his own 6.5-284 (far less radical) light gun is capable of that kind of raw accuracy (in good conditions). Again we are talking about single group size, not an AGG shot in competition. Call it the gun's "peak mechanical accuracy." BTW, Tim may know a little bit about what that caliber can do -- he was the 2003 NBRSA 1000-yard 2-Gun Score Champion shooting a 6.5-284.
Jackie, as you know, the top 600-yard shooters (some of them using 6.5-284s) can shoot 1/4 MOA and better at 600 yards in good conditions. Therefore I don't find it so far-fetched that a big heavy gun with a really good barrel could produce a group in the ones (i.e. 0.100-0.199") at 100 yards.
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Maybe it would have been better if I just never mentioned the accuracy claims. I did vet those claims with Tim North before running the story. He doesn't think they are invalid. In any case a gun built with the sleeve system will soon be on the long-range BR circuit and people can see for themselves whether it works. Again think "ideal mechanical accuracy" rather than "in-competition-agging-capability".