The 1 MOA Hoax: How they’ve confused shooters

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Most hunters think a hunting rifle can generally shoot 1 MOA of accuracy, but in this video I show how achieving that tight of precision in a hunting rifle is actually harder than that. In a safe environment at gun range, I challenged hunters to see if they could shoot a 1" group on a target at 100 yards.

Пікірлер: 3 100

  • @stephenjohnson8205
    @stephenjohnson820511 ай бұрын

    A semi long term experiment I would like to see is a "cold bore group". Where you shoot one shot once a day/week at the same target for 5-10 shots. Then you may truly know where your hunting rifle would impact for that one and only shot you get at a game animal.

  • @tomphillips2608

    @tomphillips2608

    11 ай бұрын

    Check out "Panhandle Precision " Sam Millard did just that. He worked up loads for his 260 remington. One shot per day, in very cold Idaho winter . Sub inch. 130 berger hybrid otm , h4350.

  • @ShortArmOfGod

    @ShortArmOfGod

    11 ай бұрын

    Look up todd hornet's views on cold bore vs clean bore. Temperature is irrelevant.

  • @sportsmanslegacy

    @sportsmanslegacy

    11 ай бұрын

    I literally zeroed my hunting rifle one shot every morning for a week so that i could be absolutely certain that my cold bore shot was spot on. Shot my biggest buck yet at 611 yards. Was it necessary? Probably not. Was the peace of mind worth it? Absolutely lol

  • @Jake-bt3fc

    @Jake-bt3fc

    11 ай бұрын

    ⁠​⁠@@sportsmanslegacyI wouldn’t go around bragging about shooting deer at 611 yards. It’s kind of like bragging about how great you are at hunting deer with a .22

  • @phild9813

    @phild9813

    11 ай бұрын

    To your point, I shoot one of my rifles once at a target per year, and it lands in the same spot every year. I’ve never overlaid them, but wish I had. I trust this one more than any other.

  • @dcsensui
    @dcsensui11 ай бұрын

    I worked really hard to get my rifle under 1 MOA. And the first deer I shot was just over 20 feet away. That's how life works sometimes. 🙂

  • @interrestrial9815

    @interrestrial9815

    11 ай бұрын

    I know what that is like. And the best part for me is the long range practice in preparation for antelope and dall sheep and then 75 yards or under.

  • @dukevonflankenheimer9430

    @dukevonflankenheimer9430

    11 ай бұрын

    LOL ain't that the way!!

  • @terpsurfer7221

    @terpsurfer7221

    11 ай бұрын

    But now you have rifle squared away for when you need it... I practice out to 700 and have never shot further than 125.

  • @1BeGe

    @1BeGe

    11 ай бұрын

    Same. I hunt a place that goes out to 500 yds, and I worked up a 1/2 MOA load to go hunt it so I could take some of the longer shots. First deer I took with that load stepped out at 80 yds.

  • @forever556mm

    @forever556mm

    11 ай бұрын

    In the last 6 seasons I have had 1 step out @ 115 yards 1 @ 75 yards the rest less than 50yards ,😂

  • @SavageShooters
    @SavageShooters6 ай бұрын

    One other thing to take into consideration is that most of these manufacturers have an indoor test range where they can do their accuracy testing, and more often than not that range will have an extremely heavy steel bench with pneumatic or electronic vices that clamp the rifle in place and some sort of mechanical trigger actuator. They do this to remove as many human and environmental variables from the equation as possible, but it also makes it much easier for them to shoot those smaller groups more regularly because those typical variables are now constants. I've also learned from my own testing and rewatching some of the video I've recorded while shooting that something as minor as varying how tightly you pull the rifle back into your shoulder can dramatically affect how the rifle recoils and where the shot goes. Probably 90+% of so-called "fliers" are the result of shooter inconsistency rather than anything to do with the gun or ammo.

  • @blakebeaton5821

    @blakebeaton5821

    5 ай бұрын

    I'm glad that someone else pointed out the difference between the accuracy of any individual shooter and mechanical accuracy of a firearm. It goes along with how many times I have had to ask people if they are a more accurate shooter than their rifle is mechanically accurate, which would then be the absolute best accuracy achievable.

  • @LostinmyAmazingness
    @LostinmyAmazingness7 ай бұрын

    One of the issues, in my opinion, is that people aren’t honest with themselves. Everyone thinks they’re a delta green seal and they can take a cold shot from two miles away and assassinate a hummingbird with a heart shot. Everyone wants to be seen as “that shooter.” But I completely agree with you, very few people can do sub moa consistently. And very few firearms are capable of it, consistently. This was a great video and helpful with the “guarantee” of manufacturers. Thank you.

  • @gabriels5105

    @gabriels5105

    5 ай бұрын

    I bet its more likely that people dont adjust sights properly perfectly when they start. People are willing to lay there guns on objects so I am sure some people would be geting good accuracy if there guns were shooting right where they aimed. Most people have never heard of barrel harmonics to begin with. They probably dont know they need to pay attention to their shape shifting barrel after 2 shots. Guns really should come with 2 sights so you can adjust one for the cold shot. I bet its the opposite for alot of shooters and some would be really great shots if they did not have trash barrels that move horizontaly or diagonally with heat instead of vertical.

  • @tylerbrown4483

    @tylerbrown4483

    4 ай бұрын

    I have a budget precision rifle that I built on a R700 SA that I can shoot to 0.75 MOA at 100 yds for as many shots as is requested. None of my stock hunting rifles will do it in 5 shots consistently. Best I have is a Browning BAR 30-06 that can usually put 3 in sub 1.00, but will throw a flyer before 5 shots most of the time. The sporting barrel just doesn’t hold up over that many shots in any reasonable timeframe. The clean cold bore shots are always flawless, and it gets worse from there. I could probably get the browning to do it in 5 if I let it cool all the way down between each shot, but I reckon it would take an hour to get through it. But then I don’t see the need for a stock hunting rifle to be sub MOA. I’ve never had any issues getting the browning to shoot minute of deer chest out to MPBR, and I’m thankful for that light barrel when trekking.

  • @gabriels5105

    @gabriels5105

    4 ай бұрын

    This is great. I think it ultimately proves thay they should bring back water cooled barrels and add tempreture sensors to them. People are probably attempting to become great shooters on sub par guns and there are just not enough 1500 yard guns to go around.

  • @tylerbrown4483

    @tylerbrown4483

    4 ай бұрын

    @@gabriels5105 lol. Need a 50x FFP scope with target illumination and aimpoint recognition and servomotor target tracking to get best results. Who aims their own rifle these days? Just punch the shot data into the ballistics computer, select your target and let the rifle aim for you. Then you just have to squeeze your 3 ounce glass trigger when you’re ready. In reality I think people fail to realize that shooting and hunting are two different sports. If you want to shoot, get a gun that will shoot. If you want to hunt, get a gun that will hunt. Great shooting guns don’t make the best field companion, and great hunting guns will never be the best bench rifles. Outside some special cases like sheep hunting, I can’t come up with a need to be MOA or better. Even an 800 yard shot on an elk gives you 2 MOA to play with. And the overwhelming majority of hunters are taking the overwhelming majority of their shots under 150 yards and aren’t shooting more than 300 yards in any case. Which, on a deer gives you 3 MOA, and on an elk gives you 5 MOA. Goes hand in hand with some other hard truths, like projectile selection is more important than cartridge selection, and sinking time and resources into getting ready for 800 yard shots is less effective than sinking the same time and resources into your ability to locate and get closer to the game you want to hunt.

  • @gabriels5105

    @gabriels5105

    4 ай бұрын

    @@tylerbrown4483 hey that sounds like what the army is doing minus the aiming for you and possibly the temperature sensor. I suppose people dont need nice guns for hunting but people get many guns anyways. Alot of them practice some times. Ideally we could all get a perfect gun. Sure at a 1000 yards a cartridge is more important but at 100-300 yards we would still see the benifit. With a weak cartridge ideally at 100-300 yards we could be shooting bullets through the previous holes on a target. We would not need as far away of a target and instead we could just use a small target instead. It would also give alot of people confidence to know when we are just aiming bad and we can improve rather just not knowing. Also precision stuff is a little more expensive. If we could just have some super heavy water cooled thing with a radiator and a few tricks to make it more accurate we could possibly get a bunch of budget guns that actually shoot good or take away buisness from companies that way overcharge for what they sell.

  • @mickeycruz912
    @mickeycruz91211 ай бұрын

    I work at a gun shop. Most shooters I deal with don’t understand how difficult it is to shoot a sub MOA group. Now these are mostly newer shooters and even some are new to reloading. It’s not just the gun, the shooter and ammo bring a lot to the table when it comes to shooting Sub-MOA.

  • @Animo2006

    @Animo2006

    11 ай бұрын

    Most of the time, its entirely the shooter and not the gun. Sub MOA is exceedingly difficult to shoot consistently.

  • @sammiches6859

    @sammiches6859

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@Animo2006Ammo plays a massive part in the operation. I would add that most of the time *when a shooter makes a mistake* they blame the ammo or gun, when it's just them flinching.

  • @flyingirish31

    @flyingirish31

    10 ай бұрын

    Lol. It’s not hard.

  • @cameronbaker7959

    @cameronbaker7959

    7 ай бұрын

    90% shooter 8% ammo 1.5% optics issue of some sort. Improper Set up or defect. .5% maybe a rifle issue

  • @cameronbaker7959

    @cameronbaker7959

    7 ай бұрын

    @@flyingirish31it’s not hard if you practice but ppl don’t ppl shoot the same box of coreloks at deer for 7 years bc that’s as much as they shoot but no MOA is super attainable. I’ve got 4very affordable (sub$600) rifles all of which are .75inches at the end of a cleaning cycle and anywhere from .25 to .3 when perfectly fouled up say 6-150 rounds then they open up a touch. They will shoot MOA absolutely filthy filthy and hot all day any day out to 600 and I’m sure further but that’s as far as I have steel and access to safely shoot

  • @coreymoyers
    @coreymoyers11 ай бұрын

    Most people don't realize how much parallax error of the scope affects their groups. If you don't know how to center your eye and happen to shift your head even the slightest, you will never line up to the same point every shot.

  • @jleano609

    @jleano609

    11 ай бұрын

    True. At least on hunting scopes that are non-parallax adjustable. And for these scopes the manufacturers may SAY they are focused parallax free at 100yards but are they? I've done testing and often it is less. I get relative movement of reticle and target doing the "head bob test" with the gun stationary, even at 100 yards. Sometimes as much as an inch. So that's as much as about an MOA error in the scope right there. As you say, good eye alignment through the scope minimizes parallax error but it's an issue. There's lots of good info out there on parallax error if you can find it. The best comes from benchrest rimfire shooters as parallax and focusing is actually a bigger issue at SHORT ranges not LONGER ranges in a lot of ways.

  • @jutde

    @jutde

    11 ай бұрын

    You're absolutely correct. I witnessed a local gunsmith verify sub-moa on rifle because the owner wanted to check before sending it back. The smith used a laser sighter to re-center the gun in the vice to the exact same point of aim between shots and it actually did hold about 3/4 moa.

  • @bennichols1113

    @bennichols1113

    11 ай бұрын

    Cell ph mounted on scope fixes that

  • @jeff9062

    @jeff9062

    11 ай бұрын

    Totally, had a cheaper line Vortex scope that was very difficult and frustrating to the point I had to get rid of it because of this reason.

  • @salninethousand2496

    @salninethousand2496

    11 ай бұрын

    It's very small at 100 yards (the subject of the video) - like 1/4" worst case for the average hunting scope whereby the eye is off center to the extent that would be ridiculous. So in reality parallax is under 1/8" for the average shooter (the eye is only off center somewhat). See online parallax calculators.

  • @freedomlover425
    @freedomlover4259 ай бұрын

    Judging by the folks I see at the range 2 weeks before opening day, I'd say the average is 8-10 MOA and when some random shot finally lands in the middle they stop and declare the rifle "sighted in."

  • @MetalDetroit

    @MetalDetroit

    Ай бұрын

    Cant disagree

  • @jhanks2012

    @jhanks2012

    20 күн бұрын

    and "sighting in" has nothing to do with the ability to shoot sub-MOA ... you could have them all land within an MOA just not where you're aiming at. if the only goal is to shoot sub-MOA (not that it should be) then they shouldn't be fiddling with the sight adjustments at all, but simply holding at the same spot and firing the whole group

  • @timhelman99
    @timhelman998 ай бұрын

    Great topic. I'm glad someone is finally calling out manufacturers on their ridiculous "sub moa" guarantees.

  • @cameronbaker7959

    @cameronbaker7959

    7 ай бұрын

    I’ve never had a rifle not be. I think this issue is with the shooter 90% of the time and 8.99% it’s their shit ammo and then 1% it’s their optic meaning they didn’t set it up properly. Leaving .01% it’s the rifle bc stuff does happen but 99.999% of ppl suck at shooting if you have a .5moa rifle and a 1moa shooter the best you can get in theory is 1moa the best you can in worst case scenario is 1.5moa

  • @krislink1761

    @krislink1761

    6 ай бұрын

    Well here's my theory. In a most likely indoor range, with a particular lot of ammunition, manufacturers probably do get a 1 or sub moa group. Probably also clamped in a bench vice to help with vibrations. Not out in the sun, in a dry area, with untested random brand ammo. And also likely a consistent barrel temperature. Let's face reality on this. A hunting rifle is just that. 1 shot and you've harvested your trophy. No need for 5 back to back rounds. You don't warm the rifle before taking the shot

  • @dbuckner902010

    @dbuckner902010

    6 ай бұрын

    For me I wouldn’t call it ridiculous is it common no but it only has to achieve it one time you see it a lot in the archery industry with IbO speed tests the bow only has to hit that mark one time and it gets that rating I myself as a consumer know what it is capable of but real world it will never hit that mark

  • @cameronbaker7959

    @cameronbaker7959

    6 ай бұрын

    @@krislink1761 lead sled and or a vice for vibrations bleeds accuracy out of a rifle It screws up harmonics it is not hard to shoot sub MOA …. 1.047”. 1 inch is submoa at 100 and yes they use good ammo not shitty steel cased or surplus stuff it’s match grade ammo which the MOA guarantee suggests

  • @slelliott14

    @slelliott14

    5 ай бұрын

    Ammo will make as much difference, and match just means consistent, doesn’t mean it’s what your rifle will shoot well.

  • @lz3572
    @lz357211 ай бұрын

    Yes the sub MOA guarantee is sometimes only with Premium ammunition. I found that achieving sub MOA with a 5 shot group is usually only done with hand loads . There are many variables in accuracy. Great video Cheers

  • @dn88s

    @dn88s

    11 ай бұрын

    Yes, either handloads or trial and error to find the right factory load.

  • @lz3572

    @lz3572

    11 ай бұрын

    @@dn88s 👍👍

  • @T-DsGaming

    @T-DsGaming

    11 ай бұрын

    I do it with plain old factory ammo all the time.

  • @lz3572

    @lz3572

    11 ай бұрын

    @@T-DsGaming i didn’t say it couldn’t be done with plain old factory ammunition. I apologize!! I should have said it was easier to achieve it with hand loads. And I’m sure you are consistently getting sun MOA groups standing free hand with iron sights 👍

  • @T-DsGaming

    @T-DsGaming

    11 ай бұрын

    @@lz3572 I don't know any shooter who hunts or shoots for group size with iron sight and free handed.... All the rifles I own shoot sub moa with factory ammo, most of the time it's the shooters fault for bad groups.

  • @YouveBeenMiddled
    @YouveBeenMiddled11 ай бұрын

    If you're shooting factory ammo (even super voodoo match), 2 MOA for *all* of your shots is expected. If you're looking for _any single_ sub-MOA three-shot group, even a blind squirrel finds a nut now and then. Props to those manufacturers that publish their testing process for their guarantees.

  • @brians2733

    @brians2733

    11 ай бұрын

    I shot a 2 MOA group last week with Black Hills .223 52gr Match HP (might no longer be made). It was a 20 shot group, however.

  • @jakegarrett8109

    @jakegarrett8109

    11 ай бұрын

    Its amazing because airguns (cheap ones too) get sub 2 MOA easily (and I'm super rusty, like I live in a state where even a water squirt toy is illegal near me, and you can't even own a .22 hand pewpew in your own home without bribes, and also playing with Nerf toys or slingshots is illegal in multiple counties in your own backyard). So when I was out of the state I was able to put a 10 round magazine on a penny from 30 yards with ease (would be roughly 2.25 MOA, but I wasn't hitting the edges with any of the 10 so it was sub 2 MOA). Also I shake a LOT compared to when I was younger (and yes I'm only 28, whatever gene that causes shaking runs in the family) Even at 308 ft (102.6 yard) I got 7 out of 10 pellets to hit a soda can (which is about 2.6" wide), I was just amazed at the accuracy considering maybe 2 years ago a buddy of mine said "nice shot", when it wasn't the target I was aiming for, lol! Also note there was light wind (below 10 mph), and I was using cheap economy pellets and nothing fancy, no proper tuning either (I want to try out some high quality ammo next time I fly out, because that's just impressive) That was with only a day or 2 of playing with a new regulated PCP. Those things are amazing, and with scope and plenty of pellets it was less than $500. Yes compressor was about $250, but that was the only support equipment needed. Lots of fun!

  • @Lifted0311

    @Lifted0311

    11 ай бұрын

    military 7.62 LR can consitently hold 1 moa out of their snipers, When i was an instructor, our students had to take a cold bore shot at a circle the size of a dip can as their first qualification shot

  • @iceman5117

    @iceman5117

    11 ай бұрын

    If the manufacturer is guaranteeing 1 moa, that rifle better do it under any condition, with any ammunition

  • @1badombre82

    @1badombre82

    11 ай бұрын

    I built my 308 and it's sub moa with federal fusion hunting ammo. I've got proof of a .75 inch group at 200 yards even. That being said I only measure 3 round groups not 5 round groups.

  • @JohnnyButtercuts
    @JohnnyButtercuts10 ай бұрын

    I am an experienced shooter. Always shoot 5 shot groups because 3 is luck based. I bought a precision rifle ($2,500) and put on a premium optic ($2,700) and I average 0.7 - 1.1 inch with all different ammo brands. It is incredibly hard to do better than that with factory ammo. You need “precision” loads that work well with your “precision” rifle to achieve sub .75 MOA

  • @Muskiehunter92

    @Muskiehunter92

    7 ай бұрын

    Also done plenty of target shooting myself. In my experience, the barrel is the most important factor. An aftermarket barrel will help accuracy more than anything IMO. I have a .308 savage model 10 w/ the mcmillan stock... all factory parts with good optics and a steel rail. It can do .5 MOA with the handloads that it likes. With factory rounds it will do 1 MOA fairly readily.... but ammo choice makes a big difference with it. Its proven in my handloads where the gun loved berger VLD 155s but did not like the 168's ... conversely it loved the hornady 168 match bullets.... all under the same load of varget and same headspacing and the same fire formed brass. No one can tell you what ammo your gun will like the most. Some firearm brands tend to like certain ammo manufacturers more than others, but nothing is guaranteed. It needs to have a taste of a bunch of ammo before it tells you its favorite. I have a 30-06 savage 111 for hunting and with handloads it does a solid 1 MOA... At times it can manage .5 -.7 MOA ... and to be fair I have not done too much load testing for it. Just ran 5 different loads through it and picked the best one. Its a hunting rifle and just under 1 MOA is plenty fine. Now, for the most ridiculous groups I've seen and shot is with my fathers rem. model 700 custom .308 ... only thing stock is the receiver ... That gun, with the handloads it likes can do 1 jagged hole pretty easily. Its ridiculous. I still have a target that my pops shot at 300 yards and the grouping is easily less than .8 of an inch with 5 rounds. This makes me believe that nothing can out do an aftermarket barrel.... unless you are dropping 4-5k + on a wicked high end rifle then I'm sure those barrels are just fine too... but for the average low-er cost target rifles, swapping to an aftermarket barrel is the biggest accuracy jump you can get. I am considering re-barreling my .308 and making it a 6.5 creedmore or 6.5 PRC while I'm at it. Anyways, just figured I'd share my thoughts for whoever cares. Safe shooting folks!

  • @JohnnyButtercuts

    @JohnnyButtercuts

    7 ай бұрын

    @@Muskiehunter92 my rifle is a 6.5 from Badrock Precision. I agree with everything you said tho

  • @1badombre82

    @1badombre82

    6 ай бұрын

    Dang. I built my own precision 308 for $650 and put a $300 swfa 10x on it. Same 5 round grouping size with federal hunting ammo as your $5000 setup. Not that I wouldn't spend that much if I could but the cost sure doesn't seem to represent the results

  • @colb9916

    @colb9916

    6 ай бұрын

    I've been pro roo shooting about 20 yrs. 99.9% of my shots are at night, under spotlight, resting on the bars mounted on the doors. very few are more than 200 yards. (single brain shots are harvesting licence requirements) I use a Ruger m77 VT in 223. Heavy stock, heavier barrel, target grade 2 stage trigger. A more than capable rifle. (as it came from factory) $1540 with a decent Bushnell scope. Most decent factory ammo groups a little either side of 1 moa. My handloads, shoot around half that. For a factory rifle with hand tuned hand loads, that's more than satisfactory. Change up to my .308 fullbore comp rifle. (jacket, sling, elbows & peep sights) we start at 300 out to 1000 yrds Not a factory rifle by any stretch of the imagination, with loads as precise as I can make them. Well capable of under .3 on most days. Receiver $2500 Barrel $1000 (fitted) Aluminium cnc machined, multi adjustable stock, $3200 Aperture sights (front and rear) $2600 Not much change from $10k to get that precision.

  • @JohnnyButtercuts

    @JohnnyButtercuts

    6 ай бұрын

    @@1badombre82 yeah but your bolt and lockup aren’t as smooth, your rifle doesn’t weight 50 pounds and sit completely rock solid without extra effort and your scope isn’t capable of 1,000+ yard shots with good target identification. That’s the difference. You built a cheap hunting rifle and found what it likes to eat. I’m not out there trying to keyhole rounds at 100 yards all day lol

  • @FCWW87
    @FCWW8710 ай бұрын

    Love this guy! Just stumbled on this channel, and it’s hitting the spot. The right amount of science, guns, and humor. Jolly good time, good on chap!

  • @robertlawson698
    @robertlawson69811 ай бұрын

    Another factor to consider: many shooters have fallen for the myth that a squeaky clean bore is essential for pinpoint accuracy. The copper from the bullets will"plate" the bore and fill in minor imperfections which more often than not,will improve accuracy. Excessive scrubbing and brushing, especially with strong solvents, will often do more harm than good.

  • @benfromalbuquerque6083

    @benfromalbuquerque6083

    10 ай бұрын

    Exactly. Shoot my best groups with a smooth bore 12 gauge.

  • @mrmouse-ol9pw

    @mrmouse-ol9pw

    10 ай бұрын

    Ya that's dumb. There's a reason snipers in WW2 used "dirty" barrels

  • @RedBeardLongRange

    @RedBeardLongRange

    9 ай бұрын

    Those people would have a heart attack if they saw the barrels I’m making 1800+ yard shots with 😁

  • @mrmouse-ol9pw

    @mrmouse-ol9pw

    9 ай бұрын

    @@RedBeardLongRange 1800 yards?? Really? Impressive

  • @toolman5774

    @toolman5774

    9 ай бұрын

    Erik Cortina has proven that is a lie lol. Same experience though, light fouling helps one of my rifles, the other likes a squeaky clean bore

  • @joethearcticfox
    @joethearcticfox11 ай бұрын

    The test that changed the way I think about accuracy is 5 groups, 5 shots each, on the same paper, no flyers excluded. As you said, competition guns can stay sub-MOA, but hunting rifles usually can't.

  • @marinioaweischo6614

    @marinioaweischo6614

    11 ай бұрын

    If a hunting rifle can do it, i would count on Tikka or Blaser, but you have to search the right ammo. We sight most of our customers rifles in, if they see a group around 1 Moa, they are not happy with it. As if they would need it, most times shots are below 150m, and very few are able to shoot such groups from a log or whatever. On top of that, if the customers sight in for them self, they have their last shots with a warm barrel, not the first, which counts.

  • @maguslascivious4980

    @maguslascivious4980

    11 ай бұрын

    Thin barrels and ammo... that'll wreck it every time.

  • @anthonykaiser974

    @anthonykaiser974

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@maguslascivious4980that very much depends on the barrel, how it was made, if it was cut rifles, and if not, was it destressed, was the boldface trued, etc.

  • @stuntmanmike37

    @stuntmanmike37

    11 ай бұрын

    If you're going to shoot 5 - 5 shot groups, then why wouldn't you just shoot one 25 shot group and try to land all the rounds on the same spot? That would tell you what you and your rifle are really capable of.

  • @joethearcticfox

    @joethearcticfox

    11 ай бұрын

    @@stuntmanmike37 Fair point, and you could ask the same thing about the proposed 5 3-shot groups, 3 5-shot groups, or 2 7-shot groups in the video. 3 or 5 shot groups are easier to track the impacts of each round, and there can also be value in measuring Average Mean Radius as well as Extreme Spread.

  • @goalscorer20
    @goalscorer2010 ай бұрын

    I vote for the first one. 5 3shot groups. As a hunter the first shot repeatability is what matters. So I’m always going to choose more groups over bigger groups. For my bow i keep track of my first shot every practice session because that is way more indicative of what will happen in season than the 7th or 8th group of that session

  • @stigcc

    @stigcc

    6 ай бұрын

    Do you have "cold bore shot" with your bow? Since many claim it is more a "cold shooter shot"

  • @nicholascurrymaciel761

    @nicholascurrymaciel761

    6 ай бұрын

    @@stigccI consider that. I find if I shoot my bow like a target shooter after the second string of arrows I shoot like crap. But but I only shoot 5 arrows practicing like I’m taking a single shot on game I stack them almost every time. It’s less shooting but more practice for me.

  • @862brady
    @862brady9 ай бұрын

    In my personal experience most shooters are overwhelmed shooting 5 shot groups with a big game cartridge. I found three shots reduced fliers. This was my experience as range master at the Tucson Mountain Park shooting range. Aside from that most sub moa groups in my experience were a fluke. Only a rare few were semi consistent. They also seemed inclined to say 400 yards was the end under hunting conditions. Totally agree with your video. My belief almost any reputable manufacturers rifle, combined with it's favorite factory ammo is more accurate than the vast majority of shooters. Oh and 3 out of 5 in one hole is dang good. :)

  • @clartro
    @clartro11 ай бұрын

    I totally agree with this. That being said, most people suck at precision shooting. These 3 to 5 moa groups I see at the range could easily be under 2 moa with someone who knows what they're doing.

  • @Mr.Killswitch

    @Mr.Killswitch

    11 ай бұрын

    Exactly and statistically speaking.. backfiretv is among that group of shooters.

  • @daviddale3624
    @daviddale362411 ай бұрын

    I do so love "honesty". That, because there is so very little of it to be found.

  • @highbrass3749

    @highbrass3749

    11 ай бұрын

    Especially from the institutions we’ve been told to trust.

  • @logansmith8553

    @logansmith8553

    11 ай бұрын

    Yep, especially in any gun group found on Reddit.

  • @marw1920

    @marw1920

    11 ай бұрын

    my guns honest - but it took a lot of modification

  • @qoph1988

    @qoph1988

    13 күн бұрын

    I agree, Mr. Diogenes

  • @brianpulscher6514
    @brianpulscher651410 ай бұрын

    I have a PH2 that hangs around 1MOA, but I've worked hard to get it there and quite a lot of load development. Range conditions also need to be darn near perfect. I have managed to shoot a few 1/2 MOA groups, but even with all the work that isn't the norm. It's really hard and you have to be very focused. Good Stuff!

  • @JJGuccione
    @JJGuccione10 ай бұрын

    Your best VDO. I will say it is a top ten firearm VDO for all firearm enthusiasts. That’s everything on KZread. This defines the MOA spectrum expectation. Brilliantly done.

  • @TheAnimal191
    @TheAnimal19111 ай бұрын

    I actually didnt know that there was so much Gypsy nonsense behind the scenes. This qualifies as a public service announcement. Haha! I vote the average of 5x 3-shot groups to include the cold bore with off-shelf ammunition. This I think gives us the most data points for the most realistic scenarios for most people. Great video, thanks for the info!

  • @ravener96

    @ravener96

    11 ай бұрын

    Or just go to the size circle 90% of the bullets will go through. Shoot a few hundred rounds and discard the worst 10%

  • @abstractapproach634

    @abstractapproach634

    11 ай бұрын

    Depends on threat model, most threats not dispatched by a pistol will probably heat up your rifle a bit. Also, you either standardize ammo or just make it more complicated (people will find the best box that doesn't say "match" on it) I say bring what you will realistically be shooting. Your competition is yourself, so be true to that whitebox Winchester if that's what will be in your gun when you need it.

  • @TheAnimal191

    @TheAnimal191

    11 ай бұрын

    @@abstractapproach634 In my AR, I shot only M193. Definitely need to standardize ammo, I actually kind of assumed that was a given. I simply meant whatever the standard is, it shouldnt be a hand-load, rather readily available big-box distributed off shelf loads

  • @john-paulsilke893

    @john-paulsilke893

    11 ай бұрын

    @@TheAnimal191my Bushmaster shoots 1.75 off bags or bipod with steel cased Tula 62’s. Of course the real number is closer to 2.0 because flyers are a thing. Some guns simply don’t need to be that accurate to be fun or effective. His 800 yard deer example is something I wouldn’t try with my super sexy .338 Rem 700, unless I was desperate or it was a paper deer and I was showing off.

  • @jmkhenka

    @jmkhenka

    11 ай бұрын

    when i do load development for my rifles, i do a ladder (5x5 diffrent charge weights) but a good group does not mean im finnished. I need atleast 2x3 more groups of the same load out a cold rifle to be certain. And before hunting, i generaly do atleast 20 more shots of the same load. Everyone can do a 0.25" group once in a blue moon and it scews the results when looking for a good load.

  • @michaelalbert8474
    @michaelalbert847411 ай бұрын

    To get ANY gun to shoot good groups requires finding ammo that shoots well or is matched to your specific rifle. If you take the time, you can shoot consistently with most rifles. If you just pull any box of ammo off the shelf, it will likely shoot dramatically different from your last box and may or may not group at all. All this is also dependent on proper scope inspection and torque of the stock to the barrel.

  • @buttpirate57

    @buttpirate57

    11 ай бұрын

    Not really. I’ve found dozens of guns out of the box that can shoot it. It’s the shooter that’s the problem

  • @kutark

    @kutark

    11 ай бұрын

    This is absolutely true. Anyone who has shot 5 or 6 different brands of ammo through the same rifle knows this. Certain guns like certain ammo. This is also why reloading can be crucial for high accuracy shooting. You can find brass, bullet, powder, etc, and tailer it perfectly to your rifle. A friend of my fathers i would regularly watch him working his loads up over the course of a few trips for a new rifle and would typically shave .5 or more MOA off his groups as he got it more and more dialed in. Now, as the other commentor mentioned, the reality is that even with a 2moa rifle, the shooter is far more often than not the actual problem. I can't tell you how many times, literally countless, I've seen guys at the range pull out full custom rifles with 2500 dollar scopes and struggle to shoot consistent 3" groups at 100yd on a 5mph wind day.

  • @VitalyMack

    @VitalyMack

    10 ай бұрын

    @@buttpirate57 lol, thanks for the laugh

  • @musicman1eanda

    @musicman1eanda

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@kutarkReloading is challenging for me personally. I have always gotten better precision out of factory ammo than my reloads :/

  • @Torchedini

    @Torchedini

    10 ай бұрын

    Well if you want to measure just the gun then you clamp it down so it can't move and you'll be just pulling the trigger. But maybe that is a bit too confrontational for some people.

  • @Cobra44Magnum
    @Cobra44Magnum7 ай бұрын

    Thank you for this video. For years I hear people talk about being able to shoot MOA or even sub-MOA with their unmodified rifles using factory ammunition. I now am blessed with a gun range on my property that has targets out to 300 yards. I have had several groups of people come out to shoot at my range and have yet to find any that shoot considerably more accurate than myself. In fact, most of them are shooting 2+ MOA at best and some only shoot the 12" steel plates. Under near perfect conditions yesterday, I was able to shoot MOA for 3-shot groups at each of 50, 200 and 300 yards with a bolt action 6.5 Creedmoor using Hornady Precision Hunter rounds from a bench rest. This is the exception, not the rule, for my groups. With my AR platform rifles, shooting MOA is even more of an oddity, especially with the shorter barrels. Bottom line is that I was concerned about my accuracy but am now seeing it in a different light. There aren't many folks out there giving behind the scenes information like you do in the video. It is much appreciated.

  • @michaeldavidblunt
    @michaeldavidblunt10 ай бұрын

    Hey Backfire! My first five shot group out of a brand new one moa certified rifle was 0.75" and every other group after was hovering around 1.0". Just because the rifle can do it once in a hundred groups, does not make it a sub moa rifle. If anything I have taken away from this video is to strive for sub moa but to take pride in consistently shooting at 1 moa. Thank you for the great content! Would love to see more Sako 85 and 90 series love !!

  • @StuninRub

    @StuninRub

    9 ай бұрын

    It's heat, your rifle is the most accurate at cold bore. As the barrel heats up, it expands slightly and engages the bullet less.

  • @cameronbaker7959

    @cameronbaker7959

    7 ай бұрын

    That means you can’t shoot sub MOA not the rifles issue you proved it to yourself and he is fulfilling the prophecy of your ignorance

  • @louiscapasso4452
    @louiscapasso445211 ай бұрын

    Jim, it was great shooting with you the other day, thanks for the invite. As for those guarantees, there is always fine print, and those companies will use that to their advantage.

  • @youtubecomments5951

    @youtubecomments5951

    11 ай бұрын

    Well consumers always use free returns and etc to their advantage. It’s not companies. It’s human nature. So many people buy from Amazon and try it out cause of free returns the seller loses so much money when you do that and in turn they must jack up the price of the products for everyone that’s buying. Many times when you get returns. The items can be a total loss but for a seller to stay in business he must accept this is part of the game.

  • @hunt_trap_fish

    @hunt_trap_fish

    11 ай бұрын

    I guess, for me, the fine print is likely there because others took advantage of the company first. Like FitBit used to have an unlimited 3 year warranty. I know several people that took advantage and had their watches replaced for little stuff like a small scratch etc. So yeah, the company uses the fine print to their advantage, but which came first? The sh**ty customer or the fine-print-lawyer-y warranty? No one goes into business to lose money. And most places, if there's TRULY an error, they're really good about replacing it. Most major brands care about their reputation.

  • @youtubecomments5951

    @youtubecomments5951

    11 ай бұрын

    @@hunt_trap_fish companies have a lot of experience with general public and will do business accordingly. But also some companies are just trash but also many customers are trash abusers too

  • @tonyhill234
    @tonyhill23411 ай бұрын

    When I bought my bolt action .308 hunting rifle, I researched KZread to see which ones under $2000.00 were most accurate. Browning X-Bolt came up a lot, that's what I got. With my reloads at 100 yards, I get under MOA groups. I can consistently shoot quarters with the first shot once sighted in at 100 yards. BUT...not with factory ammo.

  • @Nick-sx6jm

    @Nick-sx6jm

    11 ай бұрын

    Yeah handloading makes a big difference. I can get most rifles to shoot 1moa or less with handloads. Thats why some makers only say 1moa with specific ammo. Like weatherby guarantees 1moa with their premium factory ammo which I have found to be true.

  • @Mournful3ch0

    @Mournful3ch0

    11 ай бұрын

    My A-bolt IIs are lasers as well, but definitely have preferences in ammo. I've had the best luck with Nosler Trophy-Grade so far

  • @tightright7561

    @tightright7561

    11 ай бұрын

    I need a new rifle

  • @Yettiattack

    @Yettiattack

    11 ай бұрын

    I bought a ruger hawkeye in 308 i could do .25 moa everyshot using factor fusion ammo from a bench at 100 yards. I since replaced it an have the same rifle in 243. Right now im shooting remington corelokts which arent as good but still moa

  • @everythingloud4068

    @everythingloud4068

    11 ай бұрын

    I have a 6.8 western in an xbolt, and the 175 grainers are crazy accurate. I have only shot up to 200 yards, and I took it out to 1,000 yards and shot a rock about the size of a coyote it was a hit every time I shot

  • @JH-lc8xd
    @JH-lc8xd6 ай бұрын

    I have several hunting rifles that shoot 1 MOA or better but I reload and it takes work especially shooting 5 shot groups (at 100 yards). But currently due to many components still being hard to find and expensive I have cut back to 3 shoot groups. Great topic to discuss. Keep’em in the 10 ring everyone!

  • @DanielJohnson-ec8rk

    @DanielJohnson-ec8rk

    5 ай бұрын

    I’m in same boat. It’s more than the gun and ammo plus shooter is more important

  • @allenbosely2059
    @allenbosely20594 ай бұрын

    I just found your Channel. Very much like the lack of ‘hype’ refreshingly logical and being respectful of mfg. Pointing out the ‘flaw/s’ in the way the guarantees are worded. Guaranteeing a specific accuracy level is tough for companies to do, I understand. So many potential variables involved. :-)

  • @g.4279
    @g.427911 ай бұрын

    Thanks to bringing attention to this! I like your proposed standards. Another important thing is ammo. You are going to be hard pressed to get an average of sub 1 MOA without quality match grade ammo that your gun likes.

  • @samthai818

    @samthai818

    11 ай бұрын

    Or handloads.

  • @robertkb64

    @robertkb64

    11 ай бұрын

    This. I went through a dozen boxes of ammo to find the right ammo (and since it was all match grade that was expensive). I now have a 1,000 rounds of exactly the ammo (down to the batch, and yes, it mattered) that will shoot 1/2 MOA in that rifle. Of course, I can’t shoot that accurately (I’m at best a 1.5 MOA shot, and more like a 2-3MOA shot in anything but the very best circumstances), so all of my testing was done in a gigantic vise bolted to my truck (best case: 5 round groups all through the same hole, worst case not counting obvious flyers: 1.5 MOA), though doing so required I keep the barrel at the same temperature. I’m really not looking forward to having to repeat this, as other batches of the same model didn’t perform anywhere near as well 😢

  • @portersorensen8814

    @portersorensen8814

    11 ай бұрын

    @@samthai818 Handloads are the only real way to get the best of the best since you can tune to exactly what your rifle wants.

  • @rebelscumspeedshop

    @rebelscumspeedshop

    11 ай бұрын

    You need ammo that's capable of delivering 1moa.

  • @joshwhitcomb2491

    @joshwhitcomb2491

    11 ай бұрын

    Agreed. With handloads very tight ES and SD can be achieved. I broke in a rifle with "premium" factory loads and ES and SD were large enough to cause some vertical stringing. Handloads shoot clover leaves.

  • @davemeise2192
    @davemeise219211 ай бұрын

    When I used to do a lot of shooting I would often get sub MOA results. However, all of my rifles were for hunting and we hand loaded for them so powder, primers, bullets and cases were all carefully selected. Even then, I was very happy if I could print a 2" group for an upcoming hunting trip. I have always felt a 2" group was more than accurate enough for hunting as I wouldn't shoot at an animal beyond 300 yards anyway. From what I've observed over 65 years of hunting, most hunters can't shoot the difference anyway.

  • @LionheartSJZ

    @LionheartSJZ

    11 ай бұрын

    I agree 100%

  • @MountainsMulletsMerica
    @MountainsMulletsMerica10 ай бұрын

    Man great video, glad someone covered this topic! Being able to achieve a 1 moa group once is VERY different than consistent 1 moa performance. You have to look at averages and not cherry picked performance.

  • @RAkers-tu1ey
    @RAkers-tu1ey7 ай бұрын

    Very Good! Yes, I care about that first cold shot. I shoot mostly 30-06, and I have spent a lot of boring hours at the range to select the factory ammo for my rifle (an old 1960's commercial Mauser action sporter). After narrowing down the best, I spent another 5 hour day with a dirty bore, shooting one box of shells, letting the barrel get to ambient temperature and going only for the 10 ring on one target. So, if that 20 round hole, with all the wind and weather and mood changes of that day, is 2 inches or less, I am good to go. My rifle likes the Norma Bondstrike 180 gr. I have no idea how the elk feel about it.

  • @vinaivue
    @vinaivue11 ай бұрын

    Absolutely correct. When I was doing the survey, I was surprised that you didn't have larger MOA groups. I was going to select 4 MOA if that was available. I'm glad you're squashing this belief. Keep it up!

  • @IisAtomik
    @IisAtomik11 ай бұрын

    Great video and hopefully it helps ease the expectations to new shooters. I know that I often beat my self up over group sizes and while I still believe most of my rifles will outperform me as a shooter it’s nice to be reminded that a “moa guarantee ” isn’t really guaranteed. Apologies if you’ve already done a video like this but if you have enough of an audience interest, I’d like to see you compile a list of quality left hand rifles, especially some of these newer cartridges. I’m a left handed shooter and while the options are greater now than they had been, I still find it somewhat difficult to find left handed rifles that don’t require a full custom build. Thank you for your content

  • @AutoTrickler
    @AutoTrickler10 ай бұрын

    this is a great video covering an important topic. the average consumer is being taken advantage of. what actually matters is the SD - the standard devation of the dispersion of a rifle. the more shots you fire the more accurately you can measure the SD of a rifle/load. it takes 15, 20, 30 shots or more to measure the SD and the more shots you fire the more you can tighten that measurement. then once you know the true SD of your rifle/load, then you can predict what any 3 or 5 shot group will do.

  • @saltysteel3996
    @saltysteel39967 ай бұрын

    I'm a former Marine and long time precision rifle shooter. Most rifles can do 1 MOA or better if tuned well and using good ammo. My 308 RPR does 0.75 MOA consistently with factory Federal Gold Medal Match ammo. I do check and correct the factory ammo with a Hornady concentricity kit. My Marlin 30-30 does about 2 MOA but it's a 100 yard rifle only for small areas. My Armalite AR50A1 holds right at 1 MOA with Hornady A-MAX ammo. My FN M4 is about 2.5 MOA. And my Russian AK and Chinese SKS is about 3 MOA. Biggest factor with long range shooting is knowing and adjusting for all the variables: distance, vertical angle like up hill or down hill, wind, temp, humidity, atmospheric pressure, ammo temp, bullet spin drift, maybe even coriolis if the range is long enough. You can get first round hits if you know all these variables and have a very well developed ballistic chart. You'll need good gear for all of this too. It's possible if you've done the work, training, and tons of practice. When in doubt, don't take the shot.

  • @dasboot9471

    @dasboot9471

    7 ай бұрын

    Not just good ammo but ammo your particular barrel likes, a lot of people have no idea what twist barrel and what weight bullets to shoot, and that slightly slower velocities are usually more accurate as well

  • @StuninRub

    @StuninRub

    6 ай бұрын

    Concentricity of ammo does almost nothing for accuracy. Consistent neck tension and seating depth is much more important. The RPR should be sub half moa unless the barrel is close to being shot out, I suspect your optic is your bottleneck.

  • @MichaelRirie
    @MichaelRirie11 ай бұрын

    For hunting rifles… the cold bore shots seem to be the most important - yeah, you might follow up with 1-2 shots, but I’d be interested in seeing group accuracy of only cold bore shots.

  • @OutsidetheEchochamber

    @OutsidetheEchochamber

    11 ай бұрын

    💯

  • @scottcrawford3745

    @scottcrawford3745

    11 ай бұрын

    @@Hihowareya315 I agree. Never shoot your sight-in groups for hunting and then clean your barrel. Clean it, sight-in, zero, fire one last one, and then off you go. For F-class, back when we all shot moly-coated, many guys would take a nylon bore brush and drizzle some moly on it and then run it through the barrel a few times to " moly-foul" it. I always appreciated that your first 2 "sighters" on-target were convertible, so, if you scored 5's or V's with your first cold-bore, you could take the scores.

  • @mikemiller5226

    @mikemiller5226

    11 ай бұрын

    @@Hihowareya315 Yep. After practicing at the range I clean my barrel and then make sure one shot is fired through it before hunting season starts.

  • @ScreamingReelsTV

    @ScreamingReelsTV

    11 ай бұрын

    This. The only shot that matters when hunting is that cold clean bore shot. If your rifle can't put one through the heart and lungs at 300m, you need a better rifle or you're just a bad shot.

  • @waynetalley7292

    @waynetalley7292

    11 ай бұрын

    2 patches of alcohol and 2 dry patches in the morning probably will take care of your cold bore shot.

  • @christophersmith4300
    @christophersmith430011 ай бұрын

    Excellent information for all of us. Perhaps an adjustment of expectations are in order. With a dose of humility in our hunting distances.

  • @abstractapproach634

    @abstractapproach634

    11 ай бұрын

    Well most do, but the shot gets farther away everytime they tell the story ;)

  • @phild9813

    @phild9813

    11 ай бұрын

    I agree completely with your point. 2moa of accuracy plus a couple moa of shooter error in the field and ballpark you have a rifle and shooter combination that shouldn’t be used past 200 yards on a pronghorn, for example.

  • @marw1920

    @marw1920

    11 ай бұрын

    Become a 'regular' at any gun range you'll experience that dose of humility up close. In my mind, I'm always a better shot. Unfortunately, the guy next to me trying to zero at 100 is tagging the wrong target - mine! No wonder my range Buddy measured my group at 2 inches (ok 20 if you count the flyers).

  • @jeremyclark5389
    @jeremyclark53897 ай бұрын

    Growing up around the “Kentucky windage” generation who only shoot once or twice a year at 100yds and then at any animal they see, it seems like a lot of individuals don’t realize how many variables truly go into every shot. Factory ammo has a larger deviation, scope rings could be over-torqued or not slid forward on the rail, thin hunting barrels get hot after a couple shots and, without a muzzle brake to reduce recoil, most people won’t admit that they’re trigger pull probably isn’t the best. This is a bad ass video that touches on a lot of those things. Love the content!

  • @rangvald4036
    @rangvald40368 ай бұрын

    It comes down to consistency. A ruger American may occasionally shoot 1 moa but not every group. A proper built $3k rifle will shoot consistent-sized groups every time.

  • @superseries7007
    @superseries700711 ай бұрын

    My Mini 14 came with a 8 MOA guarantee. 😎

  • @jacktrout5807

    @jacktrout5807

    11 ай бұрын

    I bet it'll do it too!

  • @mattthompson3656
    @mattthompson365611 ай бұрын

    I get a 1/4" moa 1 shot group every time any conditions!

  • @chiefmachining7972

    @chiefmachining7972

    11 ай бұрын

    Post a video

  • @jacktrout5807

    @jacktrout5807

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@chiefmachining7972 I think he is referring to a caliber he shoots a .25 that would be 1/4 inch 1 shot group regardless of where he hits. But I'll take a video anyway 😊

  • @mattthompson3656

    @mattthompson3656

    11 ай бұрын

    @@chiefmachining7972 If you only shoot once it's always a tight group, LOL!

  • @santiagoflores8847
    @santiagoflores884710 ай бұрын

    There are a few factors that will determine the accuracy of your rifle, i.e., which ammo your barrel likes (grain and manufacturer). I own two 6.5 Creedmoor Wilson Combat rifles. One has a 22 inch barrel and the other a 24 inch. After trying different grains and manufacturers, both rifles liked Sellier & Bellot 140 grain soft point. Out of a box of 20 rounds, shooting four 5-round groups, I constantly have on each group four rounds that group at 0.75 to 0.50 and one flyer that opens the group 1.25 to 1.75. Sometimes, all five rounds are below 1 MOA. Sometimes, all five suck. A few months ago, I decided to weigh each round and group them by weight. Each box of 20 had a wide range of weights; meaning that some had a lot more propellant. Some groups were all over and others were very tight groups (0.75 to 0.50). That proved what I had suspected all along; factory ammo is factory ammo. Forget 100% consistency. If you want consistency and accuracy, load your own shit. Most of the time is not the rifle or you. It’s the ammo.

  • @fattigla

    @fattigla

    9 ай бұрын

    They're is definitely variation in some of the factory ammunition. One thing to consider when weighing ammo for consistency, you need to also weigh the empty brass. I think you'll be surprised at the variation in brass weight with different lots of brass

  • @santiagoflores8847

    @santiagoflores8847

    9 ай бұрын

    @fattigla Good point, but the problem with factory ammo is that in order to weigh the cartridge, you would have to take it apart.

  • @fattigla

    @fattigla

    9 ай бұрын

    @santiagoflores8847 yeah, might be interesting to do with empty cases after you shoot them. Just to have the data point

  • @rangvald4036

    @rangvald4036

    8 ай бұрын

    Depends on the factory ammo but I agree the only way to know your ammo was meticulously assembled down to the microgram of powder is to load your own. My t3x shooting nosler Match grade bthp shoots half moa. Consistently. Then for the same rifle if I load up some American eagle bulk 223 I’m grouping 2 moa consistently because it’s cheap junk.

  • @jolujo5842
    @jolujo584210 ай бұрын

    This was one of your best videos 👍 Nice to hear someone verify what I have known for over 45 yrs. My dad would have agreed as well. Thanks ✌

  • @edjett2631
    @edjett263111 ай бұрын

    I'm really happy you posted this video. My favorite quote comes to mind -> In theory there is no difference between theory and practice, but in practice there is.

  • @joshwilson7008
    @joshwilson700811 ай бұрын

    This is easily my favorite channel on all of KZread! Keep the videos coming!!!

  • @johnrussell2003
    @johnrussell20034 ай бұрын

    Great video and content Backfire! As a hunter whose shots at game are usually 150 yds or less, I'm not obsessed with sub moa accuracy. I am obsessed with the first cold bore shot though. I shoot a 3 shot group with the barrel at the same temp each time. I adjust my scope to match that impact point so I know where that crucial first shot is going to go. I then shoot a cold bore shot followed by a second shot as quickly as I can aquire the bullseye. If that second shot is reasonably close to the first, I'm good to go. We've all made that less than perfect first shot and need a quick follow up! Just my 2 cents worth that's worked for me for many years.

  • @fire_tower
    @fire_tower10 ай бұрын

    Hey Jim with all this talk of accuracy could you talk about the impact qd lever scope mounts and easy to change barrels systems like the ones Deserttech has play on accuracy? I assume both have some degree of change when reinstalling a scope or barrel but is it enough to make a difference? If I change my barrel and scope back to a previously zeroed set up should I expect to be shooting a respectable MOA?

  • @michaeldavidson9939
    @michaeldavidson993911 ай бұрын

    Several years ago I freefloated the barrel on my Remington 700 because everyone was telling me it would increase the accuracy of the rifle. My groups more than doubled in size. In an attempt to recover the prior performance, I then glass bedded the entire barrel and groups tightened up to 13/16 of aninch with factory ammunition. When I started reloading ammunition a few years later I was able to achieve 5/8 inch 5 shot groups from a cold barrel.

  • @flyingirish31

    @flyingirish31

    10 ай бұрын

    That’s because simply free floating isn’t enough to make a rifle accurate. 🤦‍♂️

  • @sweetteaoutdoors

    @sweetteaoutdoors

    9 ай бұрын

    Yeah lots of rifle manufacturers used to purposefully make contact with the barrel at the fore end of the stock. Especially on wood stock rifles. Made it more consistent in different environments.

  • @YouTube_Scientist

    @YouTube_Scientist

    9 ай бұрын

    Tacit knowledge 🫡 Invaluable.

  • @tommarymarking1579
    @tommarymarking157911 ай бұрын

    Spot on with this video. I've got two hunting rifles of sub-moa claim, and even one shot get things drifting around. 5 shots have considerable drift. I have to wait 5' minutes or longer between shots to let the barrel come down to ambient temperature or it will not group. Granted, both are magnum calibers, so they really heat things up quickly. Great video and keeps it real most hunting rifles. The first shot is what counts the most.

  • @MillsAmmunition
    @MillsAmmunition3 ай бұрын

    Many folks don’t do the testing to really understand what factory ammunition shoots the most accurate with THEiR rifle. As our friends at Ransom Rest say, “If you ain’t testing you are guessing.” Once you know what works, you should keep track of your cold bore shots. The Hornady podcast is FIRE! Great video!

  • @honkie247
    @honkie247Ай бұрын

    I noticed that none of the literature that stated group size stated that the firearm in question was actually held by a person. Eliminate human error from the equation and the groups shrink significantly.

  • @user-pc7hb9hi9j
    @user-pc7hb9hi9j11 ай бұрын

    even if the rifle can shoot 1 MOA, the shooter probably cant all the time. great video! being able to shoot sub MOA is SO NOT the same thing as shooting sub MOA average. and shoot sub MOA for 3 shots is not the same as sub MOA for 5. statistics people!

  • @borkwoof696

    @borkwoof696

    11 ай бұрын

    Neither can the rifle

  • @moss8702

    @moss8702

    11 ай бұрын

    @@borkwoof696 doubtful in the high-end market

  • @charlesludwig9173

    @charlesludwig9173

    11 ай бұрын

    @@borkwoof696Most any rifle that is unitized to its stock and is loaded with match grade ammunition can produce sub MOA if fired by a trained marksman. The United States Army Marksmanship Unit has proven this via machine rest shooting of rifles built for their Service Rifle Team. These shooters get great results with the unitized rifles while untrained shooters get poor results with same rifles until they get some formal training.

  • @charlesludwig9173

    @charlesludwig9173

    11 ай бұрын

    In high power rifle competition the shooter is not thinking much about grouping but typically the result of competition will be a 10 or 20 round group and shooters who have reached high master class will shoot most rounds in the one MOA arena.

  • @mj_slender6717

    @mj_slender6717

    11 ай бұрын

    I shoot a fair bit and have so for years. I repeatedly say most new and a vast majority of older equipment is far more capable than I am.

  • @RJBiteanerd
    @RJBiteanerd11 ай бұрын

    One of the things I've found on older cartridge designs like 308 and 300 Win Mag is that some guns are extremely picky about ammo. My 308 does really well with nosler ammo but struggles with fgmm in 168 grain. My 300 Win Mag loves Barnes LRX but hates Nosler ammo.

  • @KidCorporate

    @KidCorporate

    11 ай бұрын

    Came in here to say this, ammo can introduce a huge amount of variability. I'd want same BATCH of ammo, let alone same mfg, same bullet, etc.

  • @renaissanceman7145

    @renaissanceman7145

    11 ай бұрын

    Every firearm has a preference for ammo. In fact, brand X rifle model Y chambered in Z serial number 1 and serial number 2 will almost certainly NOT prefer the same load. Edit - just so there's no confusion, this applies to every firearm regardlessof type, rifles, handguns, shotguns, cannons doesn't matter. Each is one of a kind when it comes to ammo.

  • @sdriza

    @sdriza

    11 ай бұрын

    Yep, gotta find a setup that works well - and stick to it, year after year....

  • @jay1griff
    @jay1griff4 ай бұрын

    Great video again - so for any hunting rifle where your taking an average or 1 shot ( deer - elk etc ) does it make sense then to make sure your gun is perfectly sighted to that first shot with a clean and cold bore and not care as much about where follow up shots hit with a warmed foulded barrel. The know we are splitting hairs since as long as we can hit vitals we are going on target. But this does pose a question. Is that first shot of the day at the range the most important to dial in accuracy? Just a thought

  • @SteelWolf13
    @SteelWolf136 ай бұрын

    MOA new term to me. By Scott E. Mayer What is a MOA? MOA stands for "Minute Of Angle," which is a unit of angular measurement. When the accuracy of a gun is given in minutes of angle, it is possible for a person to know approximately what size groups the gun shoots within its effective range. There are 360 degrees in a circle, and 60 minutes of arc in each degree, totaling 21,600 minutes of angle in a complete circle. Imagine the shooter is at the center of a circle, and that the target is on the edge of that circle. The distance, or range, from the shooter to the target is also the radius [R] of the circle. For any given range or radius [R], one minute is equal to (2) x (Π) x (R) / (21,600). If the range is 100 yards, that distance is equal to 3,600 inches. When we plug 3,600 in for R in our formula, the result is (2) x (3.1416) x (3,600) / (21,600) = 1.0472 inches. Therefore, at 100 yards, one MOA is equal to 1.0472 inches. The formula works for any range. If the range is 500 yards, one MOA equals 5.2360 inches. Many shooters equate one MOA to one inch at 100 yards, 2 inches at 200 yards, and so on. Often, they will call a gun that shoots one-inch groups at 100 yards a "one-MOA gun." Since targets are usually on an inch grid, and sight adjustments in fractions of an inch, the difference between "true" minutes of angle and "shooters'" minutes of angle is academic at close range.

  • @Doc2862
    @Doc286211 ай бұрын

    Brother, in the beginning, I had you as a average gun nerd. After watching many of your vlogs I figured out that you are a TRUE SHOOTER, through and through! I love whatcha do and the info I get from you helps me to learn as a shooter. Honestly, if you're a hunter, the cold bore shot is the most important one! Deers don't wait for a second shot. You drop it or ya don't. We wait for HOURS with a cold barrel. Love n light to you and keep on shootin straight. Doc,,Hendrsonsonville, NC.

  • @highlandermachineworks5795

    @highlandermachineworks5795

    6 ай бұрын

    Deers?

  • @doch1365

    @doch1365

    6 ай бұрын

    Excuse me?? I'm pretty sure you know what a fkn deer is. What, are you an English teacher?? What are you asking here?@@highlandermachineworks5795

  • @jasonhumphreys261
    @jasonhumphreys26111 ай бұрын

    A day at the range right before deer season is a real telltale. Very few manage sub MOA groups and the ones who do are usually shooting hand loads. Thoroughly entertaining to watch😅

  • @papajohnsy6659

    @papajohnsy6659

    11 ай бұрын

    If you aren't shooting handloads in your rifle you're automatically giving up accuracy and velocity, even if one box shoots very well, the next lot could be 2 moa.

  • @lostwizardcat9910

    @lostwizardcat9910

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@papajohnsy6659exactly, I never have trusted factory ammo after having a round of .220 swift that came with no powder. Your always better off using hand loads, your loosing out on ao much performance.

  • @apersonontheinternet8006

    @apersonontheinternet8006

    11 ай бұрын

    People think I'm nuts when I say that almost any rifle can shoot MOA, it's all about tuning the load to the resonation of the barrel. Factory ammunition has a huge variance from round to round, often in excess of 200fps at the muzzle.

  • @lostwizardcat9910

    @lostwizardcat9910

    11 ай бұрын

    @@apersonontheinternet8006 not to mention the fact that anyone can lap a barrel and instantly gain accuracy, also learning to re-crown a barrel will gain you accuracy. Almost any shooter that actually cares about MOA groupings is using hand loads.

  • @RILEYLEIFSON_UTAH

    @RILEYLEIFSON_UTAH

    11 ай бұрын

    @@lostwizardcat9910 Yeesh...That's nuts! Was that many years ago, ( > 20) or more recently when it happened?? Also...Isn't the 220 Swift still the fastest factory round still today? (Without me using the 'ol Google machine to check... Scouts Honor.)✋🏻😁

  • @gboutdoors5198
    @gboutdoors51987 ай бұрын

    I found your channel and you have helped me a lot you have earned my subscription

  • @heathhill7802
    @heathhill78026 ай бұрын

    It's a great discussion, alot of great points . What I know is basic, variety of factors. The big three that will determine that cluster is you,distance/atmosphere and ammo. The gun is something that is probably the most consistent. There are exceptions but a barrel is still just a block of steel with a hole .I am glad you pointed out the cold first shot Scenario .I was told as a child to always sight your hunting rifle in 1 shot every 10 minutes and if you can't scope it in at 10 shots you need to change something up . Or your not ready to be the the woods with a gun .

  • @Vikingwerk
    @Vikingwerk11 ай бұрын

    Christensen Arms has an extensive barrel break-in routine that (as of last time I looked) was mandatory for the buyer to follow to the letter for Christensen to honor their warranty. I’m a little perplexed how their sub-moa claim jives when their in-house test is evidently done before the barrel break-in process.

  • @flyingirish31

    @flyingirish31

    10 ай бұрын

    And they still don’t shoot because they are out together with crap barrels and not trued actions. Junk.

  • @Vikingwerk

    @Vikingwerk

    10 ай бұрын

    @@flyingirish31 what?

  • @flyingirish31

    @flyingirish31

    10 ай бұрын

    @@Vikingwerk cA is garbage. Only fools and fanbois buy them more than once. Everyone else learns their lesson.

  • @michaelbutler4961
    @michaelbutler496111 ай бұрын

    I would dare say these companies are using a machine to shoot these guns when they test. A machine takes out all human error. Great video and thanks for sharing this information.

  • @Mike-B-Jackson
    @Mike-B-Jackson10 ай бұрын

    I picked up a Browning X-bolt in 30-06 when it first came out. My first 3 shot group (including the cold bore shot) was at 100 yards was .70” - Yes, it was only 3 shots and I was using match-grade ammo, but I was quite pleased. I’m not saying it’ll do that well every time, and I fully understand your main point about “we ignore the average” … but doing it in its FIRST group spoke volumes to me.

  • @sapago4166

    @sapago4166

    6 ай бұрын

    There is nothing special about the first group compared to the second group or thirteenth group.

  • @Mike-B-Jackson

    @Mike-B-Jackson

    6 ай бұрын

    @@sapago4166 by “first group” I really mean “right out of the box with zero tuning.” You’re right that no one group is significantly different than another if no changes have been made - it was just that it made such a group first try and it continues to do as well regularly.

  • @sapago4166

    @sapago4166

    6 ай бұрын

    @Mike-B-Jackson I have a Ruger American in .308 that shot a .7" first 3-shot group and a .8" second 3-shot group. Then it shot a 1.5" 3-shot group. Then I switched ammo, and it didn't shoot less than a 2" group. Is it a .7 MOA rifle, a 1.5 MOA rifle, or a 2 MOA rifle?

  • @Mike-B-Jackson

    @Mike-B-Jackson

    6 ай бұрын

    @@sapago4166 I didn’t realize the comment-police were going to be online today. I should’ve also mentioned it always performs. Around .7-1 moa. My original point was experiencing that out of the box was nice. Can’t deny that.

  • @sapago4166

    @sapago4166

    6 ай бұрын

    @@Mike-B-Jackson LOL. Good point. I am taking this a bit too seriously. I'm a huge fan of Browning shotguns and the Browning Buckmark pistol. It sounds like you have a fine shooting rifle.

  • @dantyack1059
    @dantyack10598 ай бұрын

    Are you gonna do another video like this? I only live about 6 hours away and my wife and I are always up for a road-trip! We actually stayed there a couple weeks ago on our way home from Antelope hunting in Wyoming.. i have a few rifles that i would love to test in that situation.. and for some reason i don’t have a problem with the “first shot flyer“ that you seemed to think was just how it is.. if i have a rifle that does that i fix it.. also.. for this test.. did you require factory ammo or were handloads ok?

  • @jdefabs2112
    @jdefabs211211 ай бұрын

    I know a guy who had a Savage 243 that he shot sub 1 moa. He weighed each slug, the powder individually and used the same primers. Then he tried several combinations until he had the perfect slug/powder individually weighed. It's a $300 rifle with a Leopold scope if I'm not mistaken.

  • @kmafdlmagotg8328

    @kmafdlmagotg8328

    11 ай бұрын

    Saw the same thing with some guys shooting some 308s. They had their ammo so dialed in, they were disappointed to get 1 moa. I would reload if I knew what I was doing.

  • @jdefabs2112

    @jdefabs2112

    11 ай бұрын

    @@kmafdlmagotg8328 same, I don't know enough about/no where to set it up. I actually traded an old Lee press for a tattoo gun/equipment lol

  • @marw1920

    @marw1920

    11 ай бұрын

    ...you lost me at Savage

  • @jdefabs2112

    @jdefabs2112

    11 ай бұрын

    @@marw1920 I've never personally owned one so no opinion here either way 🤷‍♂️😄

  • @marw1920

    @marw1920

    11 ай бұрын

    @@jdefabs2112 I shouldn't be so facetious because I do own 1 Savage and it was my first rifle. It's a very underrated accurate rifle . But don't get me started on Leopold scopes ...😁

  • @gavinstrawn6833
    @gavinstrawn683311 ай бұрын

    I vote for 5 sets of 3 shots each. I have never shot more than two shots at a deer, but I have only hunted with a lever action this far. My buddy has an AR in 450 bushmaster, and he used 3 in quick succession when I inadvertently startled a deer towards him (do not drink soda when you go hunting!) The 15 shots will get a good variability, and the 5 sets will get the largest number of cold bore shots.

  • @Vales55
    @Vales556 ай бұрын

    In most cases it’s not just the rifle itself that makes it so difficult, it’s a *combination* of factory ammo wildly varying in quality and power, scopes that might or might not stay true to zero, the shooter, AND the rifle.

  • @longdarn
    @longdarn6 ай бұрын

    My son and I bought a pair of off the shelf inexpensive rifles one in 22-250 the other 25-06. With new triggers installed we started the reloading process. After finding our accuracy nodes we then started fine tuning for groups. In order to shoot the best 5 shot groups (MOA or better) we would fire a fouling shot first then the 5 shot string. Waiting 4-5 minutes between shots. On occasion we could get 5 shots in an inch or under without cooling the barrel. Just my experience. Great information! It is very difficult to shoot MOA.

  • @scruffyarms
    @scruffyarms11 ай бұрын

    I don't do 5 shots because I don't see the need. If I was competing in NRL or the like, then I think 10 shots would make sense. For hunting I like the cold bore shot and then the 2 follow up. That is why I do 3 shot groups, but I do shoot the same load several times and then take the average. The best rifle I have gotten is my Ruger American Go Wild in 6.5 Creedmoor. So far it averages .75 with all the ammo I have given it, but the biggest group was a 1.02

  • @ar15tac

    @ar15tac

    11 ай бұрын

    I haven’t done many 5 shot groups but with hornady 140 or 147 3 shot groups. I have got just under 1 moa quite a few times. Gun impresses me every time.

  • @phardy86

    @phardy86

    11 ай бұрын

    Same for me. Love “that ruger”! Always a shooter. Almost every load I have ever tried had loading does really well

  • @RicoMnc

    @RicoMnc

    11 ай бұрын

    When I take a rifle to the range that I haven't shot in a while I'm more concerned about how far from POA the cold bore shot is than group size. If my first 3 shots are within 1 MOA from POA (point of aim), I'm good.

  • @TTT-du6oj
    @TTT-du6oj11 ай бұрын

    Great video topic 👍Definitely easier said than done with 5 shot groups.I only have one factory rifle out of several that I would be pretty confident in winning this challenge with it’s preferred factory ammo and even then I would let the barrel cool some before the last two shots if there wasn’t a time limit.(A Tikka T3 in 243 Winchester)

  • @robertmyers4750
    @robertmyers47504 ай бұрын

    Good video. I live in Mississippi where temps can be mid 90's at the beginning of deer season. I see hunters sighting in or checking their scoped rifles in extremely hot weather. They expect same POI in 30 degree weather.

  • @JeffinTD
    @JeffinTD6 ай бұрын

    That was a most excellent video. Thanks for taking the time.

  • @poowg2657
    @poowg265711 ай бұрын

    I own mostly combloc AKs and am happy with minute of terrorist at 100 meters. Now my Savage in .17 HMR with a bull barrel at 50 yds. is a one hole gun out of a lead sled but if it's just me it opens up to a little over an inch and a quarter. As far as I'm concerned the gun is an anamoly but I'm glad to own it. Nice honest video, thanks much!

  • @WaterZer0

    @WaterZer0

    11 ай бұрын

    Are they average or overweight terrorists?

  • @robdavidson4945
    @robdavidson494511 ай бұрын

    At 68 years old and a former competitive shooter decades ago I am happy with the 1 MOA claims from the Manufacturers. I have made great shots at long ranges in front of witnesses but I haven't shot any game at more than 200 yards even in the High Desert of Southwest Idaho and Southeast Oregon. I would feel uncomfortable shooting at deer or elk at over 400 yards.

  • @danielkerry8219

    @danielkerry8219

    11 ай бұрын

    I got one at 360 yards this year, it took me 5 min to make that shot

  • @dozer1642

    @dozer1642

    11 ай бұрын

    👍 I appreciate your comment. I don’t shoot at game at super long distances. I hunt with 30-06 or 300 Win Mag and I know my guns are capable but I don’t just lob bullets down range and hope I hit an animal and hurt it. It’s unethical.

  • @danielkerry8219

    @danielkerry8219

    11 ай бұрын

    @@dozer1642 It was very ethical, and I was using .308 federal terminal ascent

  • @dozer1642

    @dozer1642

    11 ай бұрын

    I wasn’t being critical of your comment. 360yds isn’t too far if the conditions are predictable. I’ve talked with hunters that brag about wounding game out at 700yds with Hail Mary shots. Not my kind of hunters. ✌️🇺🇸👍

  • @danielkerry8219

    @danielkerry8219

    11 ай бұрын

    @@dozer1642 I completely agree

  • @Ferrari_M5
    @Ferrari_M56 ай бұрын

    Really like your videos. Very well thought out and informative. True real world applications!

  • @grif5447
    @grif54476 ай бұрын

    Shooting bug holes every time requires almost perfectly duplicating a batch of brass specifications down to case weight, neck tension, shoulder to neck junction thickness, primer seating force, sorted bullet weights, bullet to neck concentricity, bullet seating depth, tip shape consistency, and probably another 10 things just on the cartridge, then making sure the bolt face, cartridge, chamber and bore are as perfectly squared to eachother as possible. THEN, add in mechanical consistency of the action and you can shoot bug holes, but only IF the shooter can replicate the same exact shot multiple times. Shooting 3-4 MOA groups takes an AK with a crooked front sight and crappy steel case ammo made in a quasi-warzone. So the fact that most $400 hunting rifles with, let's be honest, probably a sub $200 scope on it in some cheap rings and some mass produced "good" ammo, can even split the difference and occasionallydo much better than that, is pretty incredible.

  • @foubert45
    @foubert4511 ай бұрын

    Average of five 3 shot groups - 15 shots With hunting rifles usually having lighter sporter barrels, I think it’s important to monitor heat when shooting groups. That’s why 3 shot groups with adequate cool down periods is better than 5 or 7 shot groups. With heavy barrel on benchrest rifles, 7 + shot groups can be fairly tested

  • @BillyWeisbergII
    @BillyWeisbergII11 ай бұрын

    solid video, sir. i think all the pros/sponsored shooters/influencers spouting off about having a 1/2, 3/4, 1 MOA rifle, etc when they often times do not are confusing people. just because a rifle shot 3 rounds once upon a time inside of 1MOA does not mean its a 1MOA rifle, shoot more rounds and watch that group open up.

  • @googleuser3760
    @googleuser376010 ай бұрын

    I have been very fortunate with my Remington 783. Counting the first cold shot. My three shot groups have been consistently 3/4 MOA center to center. If i do 5 shot groups it opens up to about 1 1/4 in. Thats with Remington corelokt SP 180 grains. My point of impact does vary just a tiny bit from box to box but the groups are always 3/4 MOA. Back when i bought it I paid $364 for it in 2019. I mounted a Blackhound Genesis 4-14x44 scope with weaver 6 bolt rings that i had laped. She is now my favorite shooter that I own.

  • @SModEVO
    @SModEVO3 ай бұрын

    Great video. So much truth and shedding light on the grey areas of accuracy claims. I have a factory 16” AR10 in 308 that consistently shoots 1” 10-shot groups, 0.6” 5-shot groups, and 0.33” 3-shot groups using various factory ammo from 110gr 10 175gr. It’s a freak and I’ll never sell it. I have other AR’s that won’t do any better than 3moa even with the best match ammo.

  • @chrisbcrust
    @chrisbcrust11 ай бұрын

    Thank you for pointing all of this out! As a longtime fan, I think it would be beneficial to make a video of all of the guns from old videos (if you still own them, or if the gun is still pertinent today) and publish these statistics, with and without a cold bore.

  • @mikelobdell2666
    @mikelobdell266611 ай бұрын

    This was probably my favorite of your videos. Manufacturers need to give a 1moa guarantee on higher end rifles in order to compete and yet it is basically unworkable in the real world. Only really helpful with guns that are truly defective. I have an xbolt in 30 06 that shoots at best around 1 moa occasionaly under more often slightly over. What's more important to me is that it is not picky about the ammo it does it with. My wife has a micromidas xbolt in 7mm-08 that has not been shot a lot but I've never seen it shoot a 3 shot group over an inch.(That I can remember) When she first shot it I thought that her second shot had missed the paper but it had gone through the first hole almost perfectly. I just shot a 3 shot group with it with necksized only barnes 140tsx that a dime covered. I stopped there because I didn't want to mess up those three beautiful holes with what was bound to happen if I kept shooting.🙃

  • @michaele1201

    @michaele1201

    11 ай бұрын

    You sir are exactly spot on. A hunting rifle is just that, most all shoot well enough for field conditions and that's plenty good. My best shooting and most consistent hunting rifle is a Remington model 700, 270 short mag. It will shoot 1" moa, and isn't picky about the loads. I leave the moa conversations to the precision shooters with precision equipment. Not many "Shooters" shoot as well as their equiment, and that hurts their egos. lol

  • @pdk6331
    @pdk633110 ай бұрын

    As well as considering the "average" result for your spreadsheet, a worthwhile metric is also the "median", ie the point at which 50% of your groups fall outside. Using this (which takes away the worst and best results) can give you a more realistic standard. We used this in measuring our air-to-ground bombing results.

  • @stigcc

    @stigcc

    6 ай бұрын

    Right, it will exclude the flyers

  • @TeensierPython
    @TeensierPython10 ай бұрын

    I’ve done it at 300yds 1/2MOA. But it was a perfect windless day and I used a custom built hunting rifle built by Gordy Gritters in 6.5x284. Hand loaded to perfection. So I guess your video is accurate. Reminds me of a story. I have a SIG Cross and I love hunting with it. It shoots 1 1/2 - 2moa in my hands. A customer was looking for a gun and I suggested the cross. He asked how well it shoots. I told him my experience with the guns accuracy. He said it wasn’t good enough. His loss. It’s so light and fits so well. Nice and compact.

  • @thomasford2946
    @thomasford294611 ай бұрын

    Well I feel great Jim! I voted 1.5 MOA or larger and my sig cross in 6.5cm shoots under 1 MOA “regularly”

  • @marw1920
    @marw192011 ай бұрын

    Well done. I shoot almost everyday - spend a lot of time at range (retired now). I often shoot over 500 rounds a week on the 100. Yes, I can shoot 3/4 MOA on my best days. But I average 1.30 MOA on most days (or so my range Buddy says). Most bolt-action 'scoped' shooters who come to the range to test their skills on the 100, in my experience, end up shooting about 5-7 inch group. Others are lucky to get on paper at 100 yards (usually the AR 15 guys who show up once a year to flex ). Think about it - world record bolt action competition shooters are occasionally under 1/4 MOA - but not everyday. Our best 'benchrest shooters' at the range where I practice can shoot 1/2 MOA - but not 'everyday'. When I hit the occasional 1/2 MOA I'm lucky, but then again I'm not really a 'group' guy. I prefer shooting metal out past 1000. If I hit the damn thing in 10 shots I feel like I'm a 1 MOA guy ... thats ' 1 mans opinion arguably '.

  • @charlesludwig9173

    @charlesludwig9173

    11 ай бұрын

    I find zero fault with your practice strategy. My game is US Service Rifle Competition and Long Range High Power Rifle Competition, iron sight Service Rifle Division. All of my practice used to be at the 100 yard line, anywhere from 20 to 70 rounds daily until I could shoot 96% standing scores and 98% prone scores. This routine was very expensive, $30,000 for ammo in one season where I was attempting to distinguish myself. I did that but later realized dry firing could have yielded the same results at virtually no expense. At any rate, at one point I got good enough to put 20 rounds into 3/4 MOA from prone sling supported position with 3 quarters of those inside the half minute arena until my eyes just could not resolve a consistent sight picture anymore. Fun stuff.

  • @zackzittel7683

    @zackzittel7683

    11 ай бұрын

    I have 3 sub moa rifles…… none are factory. One is a prewar model 70 in 280AI that’s been bedded blueprinted, floated heavy profile ed Shilen barrel, custom brake….. I have about 13k into it. The other is also a model 70 in an aluminum chassis and the third is a custom stainless Sako L61R (1 of 2 known to exist) in 338 win mag. Each has its own preferred loads. It’s possible, but extremely rare from a production rifle and even then with a very short list of favorable loads.

  • @michaelalbert8474

    @michaelalbert8474

    11 ай бұрын

    @@zackzittel7683 It’s easy to spend thousands of $ on rifles. If you want to shoot consistently, spend hundreds on ammo and you will shoot better. I have an old Remington 22 bolt action that I shoot consistently 1 moa at 50 yards with peep sights. I use it in competitions. I shot 20 or better different loads of target ammunition before I found the one my gun liked. I also have a 30-06 Springfield 1903 that manufactured sometime in the 1920s and my dad bought as military surplus and sporterised in our basement in the 50s. Again I shot many types of ammunition before I found the sweet spot and it shoots 3/4 moa easily. Lots of things can affect a good shot group, no replacement for trigger time.

  • @iffykidmn8170

    @iffykidmn8170

    11 ай бұрын

    Is it the AR or the nut behind the trigger?

  • @zackzittel7683

    @zackzittel7683

    11 ай бұрын

    @@michaelalbert8474 I probably shoot 15k plus center fire cartridges a year. I have 40-50 sets of dies, probably 7-800 lbs of brass in various stages of tumbling, depriming, resizing, trimming ect. One of my rifles is worth more than my truck and my car. I have a 1890 .22lr winchester that shoots 1” groups @ 50 and a win model 69 that does the same. Also have a $200 Savage that will shoot 1” groups with match grade rimfire. (It does 2moa at 350yds with subs) I’ve shot competitively since I was 16. I’ve got a video on my shorts of me shooting a 1” group with a subcompact glock at 20 yards offhand. I understand fully that money can’t buy competence…. I’m 36 and I’ve been shooting religiously for 31 years.

  • @IIIAnchani
    @IIIAnchaniАй бұрын

    Most of the time the biggest issue isn't the tool, it's the person using it. I've served in the german army, and whilst people were complaining about the G36 and that after you abuse it as a machine gun (which it isn't, it's an assault rifle or Sturmgewehr in German) it loses accuracy, most guys had more shooter error in their shooting than anything else. Make sure your training is adequate to the rifle. If you have a rifle that's capable of shooting 1 MOA consistently, you have to be able to shoot 1 MOA consistently yourself for that to be of any effect.

  • @TROD662
    @TROD66210 ай бұрын

    Great video. I ran into a problem with a Ruger #1 that just wouldn’t shoot well. I tried different bullets, powders, seating depth and waited up to 10 minutes between shots. At the end of my rope, I emailed Ruger, laid out my efforts and asked for help. The tech who answered wrote that the rifle was delivering the expected accuracy; 1 MOA at 50 yards….. that’s a 2” group at 100.

  • @Logan2070
    @Logan207011 ай бұрын

    Consistent Minute of Bad Guy or Vitals of Game Animal is all that's needed. The use of silhouette targets helps shooters understand this over bullseye targets.

  • @daveknowles3055
    @daveknowles305511 ай бұрын

    I'm partial to the 5 shot groups, the best group I have had so far is .72 most of course are higher and quite a few are over the 1" mark. Some days I go to the range and shoot 1 group and pack up because I'm not feeling it, other days not a problem to shoot 50 rounds and all decent groups. I'm shooting 6.5 Creedmoor for these groups. PS enjoying the new content on the Backfire 2 channel, glad to see it is revitalized.

  • @marw1920

    @marw1920

    11 ай бұрын

    50 rounds of 6.5 - has got to be expensive economics if everytime you go to the range. I shoot 50 or more rounds of 22LR (or .223 ) trainer 3-5 times a week and it taxes my wallet. I save my large Cal ELR rounds for splashing metal out past 1000 on competition days. It's not unusual to go through couple of hundred dollars in developed hand loads during a weekend competition 5-6 times a year.

  • @daveknowles3055

    @daveknowles3055

    11 ай бұрын

    @@marw1920 50 handholds is still expensive, I don't do that often usually a lot less and your right 22lr is budget friendly

  • @marw1920

    @marw1920

    11 ай бұрын

    @@daveknowles3055 Yep, when economics work out for me - I go the way of handloads. But I really enjoy shooting 22LR trainers on a windy day at the 100.

  • @thevoyageur2152
    @thevoyageur215210 ай бұрын

    The 1st shot is always most important to a hunter. I site in for the cold bore shot allowing the gun to cool after reading and proving that it was so much different.

  • @Judge_Dredd
    @Judge_Dredd10 ай бұрын

    How long do we get to shoot the 5 shot group? Because the Tikka T3x Super Varmint 6.5x55SE Deer Rifle I have does this for a 3 shot group, did it yesterday with the first three rounds having not shot the rifle in 4 months, but I'd have to leave the rifle 10 to 15 minutes to cool before putting the other two down range. I shoot a lot of target competitions, mainly in .22lr out to 100 yards (a distance that IS a lottery with the sub-sonics I use), but at 50 metres and 25 yards my Anschutz 1413 does 1 MOA easily enough.

  • @joshuamasterson7677
    @joshuamasterson767711 ай бұрын

    Thanks for the psa, I've personally only had one consistently sub moa rifle which was a (name redacted so as to not seem like a commercial) and that was an anomaly because i bought the same thing again and my sks with golden tiger was more accurate (at 100 yards). It has been my experience that the only way to make a rifle consistently super accurate is to work up a load that the rifle likes.

  • @Wr3ckZ
    @Wr3ckZ11 ай бұрын

    You don't know how much this report has just relieved me of a BUNCH of hair pulling stress!! I've recently gotten the 'long range shooter' bug, and bought a Bergara B14 HMR in 308, and started practicing. (I have a Ruger American Target in .22 that I normally practice with) And, for the last 2 years, I've been burning thru COUNTLESS amounts of ammo, trying to get a consistent MOA group @ 100 yards. (let alone, SUB MOA) Here I was, thinking I just sucked horridly at the LR shooting basics! On a good day, I if I drop my cold bore, I can get a 3-4 shot, MOA group, but, either my 4th or 5th one ALWAYS seems to be my fail point. I don't feel so bad now! Thank you again. This is SUCH a load off my shoulders!

  • @kintustis
    @kintustis26 күн бұрын

    "it's 1MOA, except when the barrel is in the sun, or it's windy, or I'm breathing heavy from having to walk a little, or it's a little chilly out today, or I didn't get my morning coffee, or I squeezed the trigger a little too hard, or you're just staring over my shoulder and it's making me nervous, or I'm not looking through the scope EXACTLY centered..." seems like we're overoptimizing the gun to make up for all of these factors that we can't control.

  • @stevealford230
    @stevealford23010 ай бұрын

    That's why I hunt with an Army Springfield. It can legitimately shoot half MOA as long as the shooter can shoot properly and uses good, consistent ammo, unlike modern inexpensive hunting rifles that have a 3 inch extreme spread while clamped to the bench on a good day.

  • @turbinejunkie
    @turbinejunkie11 ай бұрын

    Hornady did 2 really awesome videos on the subject of MOA and group sizes. They pretty much proved through extensive testing that virtually noone has a 1 moa rifle. The only reason people think they do is because their group sizes are too small and they really have proved their rifle.

  • @landonboomsma2594

    @landonboomsma2594

    11 ай бұрын

    What videos are they

  • @TheBeefSlayer

    @TheBeefSlayer

    11 ай бұрын

    So what? You should keep shooting till you shoot out your barrel and fail or what?

  • @victoriazero8869

    @victoriazero8869

    11 ай бұрын

    @@TheBeefSlayer No? It's about knowing how far you can realistically hit a target with a few shots.

  • @redcrackeroutdoors3234

    @redcrackeroutdoors3234

    11 ай бұрын

    That Hornady podcast is fantastic!

  • @burtdanams4426

    @burtdanams4426

    10 ай бұрын

    @@TheBeefSlayer wtf are you talking about? He's talking about statistical group sizes, as in, the number of shots being compared.

  • @heyRex
    @heyRex11 ай бұрын

    Would be interesting to see real world accuracy testing of major rifle brands

  • @yakbutter78
    @yakbutter789 ай бұрын

    I just recently got into shooting bolt action rfiles and so far have only shot at 50 yards, which is the max distance at my local indoor range. I don't really have access to rests and sandbags, so I'm sure i could keep the rifle steadier - but I've found that some 3 shot groups do in fact touch. However, after shooting another 20 rounds the whole group expands over 1.5". So on average, I'm a 3 to 4 MOA shooter with the rifle i have. I'm not sure why so many people out there think that they're not the biggest variable in accuracy.

  • @ls2005019227
    @ls200501922710 ай бұрын

    This video is SPOT ON- My lack of satisfaction with rifle accuracy has been costly.....it led me to buy numerous guns/barrels/scopes/stocks/ammo, get into machining (lathes, mill, shapers, surface grinder, TIG welder [+ all of the tooling....]), then I got into 600 & 1000yd benchrest shooting, then I built a 15 bench 600 & 1000yd range, then I bought the equipment (excavator, loader, dump truck) necessary to maintain the range......ALL OF THIS IN THE PURSUIT OF *PRECISION*.

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