I can guarantee one thing. Whatever I choose to do will be accurate. Why would anyone want a so so accurate rifle for any reason? Accuracy is always a primary concern for me. Actually I see no reason what so ever that a custom coyote rifle couldn’t have the accuracy potential of a bench gun. If built properly there is no reason for it not to be. At least in my mind, Lee
I'm with you skeeter.... I simply cannot fathom why anyone would purposely build an inaccurate rifle! The only exceptions are classic style showpieces like the Martini above or designs like Butch Lambert's Blue-&-Steel walking hunters. And of course "Dangerous Game" rifles, but dude specifically said "varmint, prairie dog and coyote" hunting.....
When I started shooting ground squirrels I set down and figured out at what range my factory rifles would HAVE TO miss. A squirrel killzone stands maybe 8-10" tall and 1.5-2" wide, so with an MOA rifle up and down was OK out to 3-400yds with my "accurate" factory guns but the guns themselves would start missing side-to-side at under 200yds!!!!! NO windcall, NO error, just MISSING. And I wanted to do like the big boys did, shoot stuff at "more than 200 yards."
I've learned though that
most of the population are really just about Pray-N-Spray, they don't really care that the rifle is INCAPABLE OF HITTING MORE THAN 50% OF THE TIME on a 200 yard ground squirrel! This is weird to me. When my moa rifle AUTOMATICALLY MISSES a prairie dog at 300yds by shooting right past it even when my hold/call is good then my effective range is 350yds MAX. Then luck becomes a factor.
wheeeee.......
And there are hunting shows that tout shooting elks and deers and stuff at ridiculous yardages using equipment that's marginally 1MOA. A RIFLE capable of 10" groups at 1000yds and an animal with a killzone about the same size....and they say "shoot!"
IMO if you're gonna' shoot stuff beyond 300yds you need yourself a 1/4moa rifle.
And then there's the "hunters" who smugly say "walk in closer so's you can shoot 'em with your Mouser." As a 30yrs bowhunter I giggle at this...
I live in big country. I _could_ shoot a 1000yd deer from my garage door. And it would take about 45min to "walk up on" the animal. I can picture a lot of situations where "walking in" 300-400yds is an hour prospect. the animal can be in the next ZIP Code by then. And of course "walking up on" coyotes and prairie dogs is laughable.
Anyways, I respect your decision.
al