Cameron Mc wrote:RDavies wrote:On a serious note, until I read about the weather conditions and the fact that it shot a cloverleaf at 500, I was thinking it is like some barrels I have actually seen. These barrels/loads shot some awesome waterline groups but always seemed to be a wide flat group, not a tidy little bug hole. I am as guilty as most with trying to chase vertical, but end up with a load which is either super sensitive in the wind, or just groups in a horizontal pattern.
Weather was rough Rod. Real washing machine type stuff. Pickups and dropoffs were rapid.
Someone else who was there may explain it better.
Julie shot a 60.7 at 300, the previous range, in easier conditions.
It shot a 60.9 at 600yds with load development.
I might test the rifle's harmonics with a large hammer though.
I could try this with the rifle too: http://bulletin.accurateshooter.com/201 ... ture-test/![]()
Cam
If it shot lovely bug holes at 500 or 600 and shot that ET picture in bad conditions, it obviously doesn't have the flat line curse. Like Brad said, I have had the occasional one which would shoot pretty flat (maybe not as flat as yours) but wide in very light or dead conditions. A change in seating depth or barrel showed the wind was not too bad.