goodgrouper
tryingtobeabettergrouper
Fwiw,
Bruno brought a mighty big stack of the golden bottle stuff to sell at the Cactus. I know because I saw it. And I bought some more of it from him as did many other folks. By Friday at lunch time I think it was (could have been Thursday because time flies when you're having fun), he was sold out. I saw lots of guys hauling it off by the 8 pound jug but when it came time to compete, I only saw a few folks pouring into their hoppers. I guess most of them wanted to practice with it but didn't dare use it for the record just yet.
Well, I used it for the match as did Lou M. and Joe O. There were a handful of other guys but I didn't get their names. I managed to place in the top third despite a small but irritating equipment problem and Joe and Lou managed to finish in the top twenty. Joe and I practiced with it all day Thurdsay and Friday and found it to be every bit as accurate as N133 and in some instances, it was actually more accurate and yielded more rounded groups. This has been the case all winter as Joe and I have broken in four barrels with it and found good nodes with XBR in temps from 30 degrees on up.
So come game time, we had a little experience with it and decided to just run it during the match too.
Saturday brought temps in the mid 70's and sunshine with little wind. I ran the same load I thought was best from Friday and I didn't change it all day. Joe started out with a load that worked for him Friday but found that three clicks more gave even better results on Saturday. Sunday came and so did the rain. We were dry and cozy inside our box van but not 2 feet from us was a wall of water. The temp dipped down to 55 degrees so we upped our charge three clicks (.3 grain) and it was drilling bugholes. Yet, leaving it at the setting from Saturday would put the shots right into the upper charge's group at 200 yards!!! In other words, it was a very forgiving powder. And if the humidity of a wall of water two feet away from the powder thrower was doing anything, damned if I could see it. It acted just like it did a day earlier in typical Phoenix weather.
Maybe we just have great barrels on our guns (and I'm sure we do) but XBR seemed easier to tune than N133 would have been in those conditions. It wasn't perfect, but it was better. That was the comment I heard from the few other guys who were using it too. I overheard one fella say he hadn't changed his load at all since Friday afternoon and this was on Sunday after lunch!
Another thing Joe and I noticed was how it seemed to carbon foul the barrel a bit less than N133 even when it got chilly and everything felt wet. We cleaned both of our guns inbetween each target all day long for four days so we felt like we had a pretty good feel for it by then.
All in all, I like the gold bottle stuff. It is as good as N133 if not better. And it's cheaper too. You still have to know how to tune a gun with it, but it is a little more forgiving. At least, thus far................
Bruno brought a mighty big stack of the golden bottle stuff to sell at the Cactus. I know because I saw it. And I bought some more of it from him as did many other folks. By Friday at lunch time I think it was (could have been Thursday because time flies when you're having fun), he was sold out. I saw lots of guys hauling it off by the 8 pound jug but when it came time to compete, I only saw a few folks pouring into their hoppers. I guess most of them wanted to practice with it but didn't dare use it for the record just yet.
Well, I used it for the match as did Lou M. and Joe O. There were a handful of other guys but I didn't get their names. I managed to place in the top third despite a small but irritating equipment problem and Joe and Lou managed to finish in the top twenty. Joe and I practiced with it all day Thurdsay and Friday and found it to be every bit as accurate as N133 and in some instances, it was actually more accurate and yielded more rounded groups. This has been the case all winter as Joe and I have broken in four barrels with it and found good nodes with XBR in temps from 30 degrees on up.
So come game time, we had a little experience with it and decided to just run it during the match too.
Saturday brought temps in the mid 70's and sunshine with little wind. I ran the same load I thought was best from Friday and I didn't change it all day. Joe started out with a load that worked for him Friday but found that three clicks more gave even better results on Saturday. Sunday came and so did the rain. We were dry and cozy inside our box van but not 2 feet from us was a wall of water. The temp dipped down to 55 degrees so we upped our charge three clicks (.3 grain) and it was drilling bugholes. Yet, leaving it at the setting from Saturday would put the shots right into the upper charge's group at 200 yards!!! In other words, it was a very forgiving powder. And if the humidity of a wall of water two feet away from the powder thrower was doing anything, damned if I could see it. It acted just like it did a day earlier in typical Phoenix weather.
Maybe we just have great barrels on our guns (and I'm sure we do) but XBR seemed easier to tune than N133 would have been in those conditions. It wasn't perfect, but it was better. That was the comment I heard from the few other guys who were using it too. I overheard one fella say he hadn't changed his load at all since Friday afternoon and this was on Sunday after lunch!
Another thing Joe and I noticed was how it seemed to carbon foul the barrel a bit less than N133 even when it got chilly and everything felt wet. We cleaned both of our guns inbetween each target all day long for four days so we felt like we had a pretty good feel for it by then.
All in all, I like the gold bottle stuff. It is as good as N133 if not better. And it's cheaper too. You still have to know how to tune a gun with it, but it is a little more forgiving. At least, thus far................