-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
There,s nothing wrong with these results,you should count your blessings doing this with an ironsided lill ól carbine....I know I do.......Cheers..
-
06-05-2011 03:49 PM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
-
Agree, any of those groups would do the job.
-
-
-
Legacy Member
Come to think about it, I always shoot with my off hand on the sand bag, cupping the fore-arm with the hand. My groups are half of when I tried without my hand in betwEEN.
-
-
Contributing Member
Even though it's only a carbine, your groups appear to be either climbing or dropping, ocassionally getting a diagonal string.
In order to ascertain which it is, you will need to plot your shots for a couple of groups, from 1st shot to last, but not withstanding, if your group climbs as the barrel heats up, you have a bedding problem, diagonal strings are caused by either bedding and pressure points on forewood, muscleing (NOT ORIENTATING THE TARGET) or too tight a sling. This may be pulling the forewood sideways and touching the barrel. If the group dispersion is dropping, you are changing your head position by crawling up the rear sight, this reduces cheek tension on the stock and allows the butt to climb fractionally.
Its all about consistency, only make small changes when you are sure that the last one has not made a difference, if it has, and it is'nt a good one, go back a step and try something else.
There are to many variables when you talk about a firearm that was'nt really built for accuracy.
-
Thank You to muffett.2008 For This Useful Post:
-
Contributing Member

Originally Posted by
muffett.2008
Even though it's only a carbine, your groups appear to be either climbing or dropping, ocassionally getting a diagonal string.
In order to ascertain which it is, you will need to plot your shots for a couple of groups, from 1st shot to last, but not withstanding, if your group climbs as the barrel heats up, you have a bedding problem, diagonal strings are caused by either bedding and pressure points on forewood, muscleing (NOT ORIENTATING THE TARGET) or too tight a sling. This may be pulling the forewood sideways and touching the barrel. If the group dispersion is dropping, you are changing your head position by crawling up the rear sight, this reduces cheek tension on the stock and allows the butt to climb fractionally.
Its all about consistency, only make small changes when you are sure that the last one has not made a difference, if it has, and it is'nt a good one, go back a step and try something else.
There are to many variables when you talk about a firearm that was'nt really built for accuracy.
That is what you only can find out with correct aimed and made shots. A carbine can be a excellent shooter. My one is a good one and im sure that there are a lot more good ones out there, without the guess of their owners.
Regards Ulrich
Nothing is impossible until you've tried it !
-
-
Legacy Member
Center of chest accuracy that all you need and that is what the carbine doe,s it kills at that range.
-
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed