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PS- Most people that flinch don't think/realize they do...
A Lead Sled is a good way to break scopes and wooden rifle stocks. I'm sure there are lots of guys that have never had problems with them, but there are enough that have that I'd never use one.
A Lead Sled is a good way to break scopes and wooden rifle stocks. I'm sure there are lots of guys that have never had problems with them, but there are enough that have that I'd never use one.
I used to just buy whatever bullets were on the shelves, but my experience with an AR15 has changed that.
I got the AR15 a little over a month ago. I put a scope on it and sighted it in with the cheapest rounds I could find (Federal 5.56mm 55 grain fmj). Pretty soon I was putting every shot within 1" from 100 yards. Then I let my kids shoot it. They both shot better than they've ever done with our deer rifles. They both decided they wanted to use it for deer hunting if at all possible. I conceded because they were getting on target much faster without the fear of recoil and they were never missing due to a flinch. I did realize that I needed to change bullets - 55 grain full metal jacket is not a reasonable deer round. I found some HPR brand 75 grain ballistic tip bullets that should have done the trick.
We went to the range one more time before my daughter's hunt.
Those 75 grain bullets were all over the place. I thought I we were just shooting bad as we went through the whole box and never got anything resembling a pattern. I pulled out another box of the 55 grain fmj and fired 3 times. The first shot was good, but I thought I missed with the next two. We decided to give up and go home for a different gun. When we grabbed the target we discovered that all 3 bullets had hit. They were just all touching so it looked like a single hole. It wasn't the gun or the shooters, it was the bullets. They probably work well in some guns, but not this one.
I returned to town and to look for other bullets that would be acceptable deer rounds. There wasn't much in stock. The first three stores only had the HPR brand or full metal jackets. Finally, Walmart had one box of Fusion 62 grain soft points. The 62 grain Fusion hit a couple inches lower than the 55 grain Federal at 200 yards, but the important thing is the pattern was tight. A few clicks on the scope and we were ready to go hunting. Both of my kids made good shots and helped fill the freezer.
I would definitely start by checking for loose parts because that is free to do. When that is done, try some different bullets.
I got the AR15 a little over a month ago.
I found some HPR brand 75 grain ballistic tip bullets that should have done the trick. Those 75 grain bullets were all over the place.
Huh... I've never seen a rifle manufacturer guarantee accuracy at 800yds. There are no guarantees at that range! Even the folks that specialize in Long Range Accurate rifles guarantee accuracy at 100yds, and most of those do not include hunting bullets. I'm not saying that this rifle won't, but will take time and practice before 800 yards becomes easy.All the ex marines I work with said that .300 WM should be tac driving out to 800 yards easy.
Why would the scope allow you to shoot acceptable groups at 100 but increase greatly at 200? Unless you have out of this world paralax issues, I'd say you have one or both of the following issues:Now this is the typical groups I am able to do at 100 yards with the WM and I've been happy with that. But at 200 yards it was ugly. So I do believe something is up with the scope.
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Mystery solved. My wife came clean and admitted that while she was organizing our walk in closet that the WM fell off the shelf and hit the floor. It was in the soft case but never the less hit the hard wood floor. I said next time don't touch my sheet.Why would the scope allow you to shoot acceptable groups at 100 but increase greatly at 200? Unless you have out of this world paralax issues, I'd say you have one or both of the following issues:
1. The loads you are shooting are quite what your gun likes
2. The nutbehind the trigger needs worked on...
If those groups truly are typical and your scope didn't take a dump between the firing of the 100 and 200 yard groups, I'd say you just need more practice. My suggestion is to fire a few groups with the lighter recoiling rifles, then shoot a few groups with the 300WM. Shooting until you shoulder is black and blue, IMO/E, is counterproductive for most folks...
Now this is the typical groups I am able to do at 100 yards with the WM and I've been happy with that. But at 200 yards it was ugly. So I do believe something is up with the scope.
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