When you said that the 65gr. will start to loose accuracy at a far distance, about how far would that be?
My goal is to be able to shoot a pop can at 150yards with every shot.
It would make me feel a whole bunch better if i knew it would still be within 2 or 3" at 200 yards though.
Do you think i should buy another barrel for this? will 55gr. bullets travel accuratly every time at 150yards?
or should i look at moveing up to 65gr?
Also, my dad said that i should buy from one company and stick with it because another company
could make it a little diffrent and it wont be as accurate with another brand. Is this true?
Or does it not matter what brand i use each time, just as long as the bullets are the same grain?
O, and will switching from hollow point to something else change the accuracy?
see if you can identify your scope, assuming it is still in production...
http://www.tasco.com/riflescopes/pronghorn_main.shtml1. this business about Bullet-weight -vs- Twist-Rate just does not apply to your shooting,
at least at the moment. We've established that you (likely) have a 1:12" twist,
that twist generally goes well with the 55gr (50-60 range) bullets...
when a shooter tries to "tune a load" for a particular chanber/barrel/twist, it will involve
finding a Bullet that performs well when shot from that rifle, then very carefully find the
Powder-burn and amount that produces just the sweetest velocity for THAT bullet to
be *** CONSISTENT ***... THEN he learns how to shoot-CONSISTENTLY such that
the bullet is more likely to travel the same (if the wind/humidity are also the same)...
and the bullets will CONSISTENTLY hit nearly the same spot... at 100yds...
then the load may need to be adjusted for a 200yd shot...
What I'm trying to say is... you're shooting from Tree-Bark with Store-bought-ammo...
so... try a few 45gr, some 50gr, some 55gr and some 60gr (assuming you can find the
variety and afford the assortment)... with the same bullet and the same powder...
which are not going to be documented... and see if you can shoot consistently...
I'm getting "wordy"... but with the intent of helping you understand that we cannot just
tell you which barrel to go buy and what ammo to buy to be the most accurate...
... we DON"T KNOW !!!... the best of us (not necessarily including me ...) work hard to
learn how to be CONSISTENT with a bullet, powder and barrel... THEN shoot consistently
and THEN learn how to use that consistent-shot to place the bullets pretty-near the same
place fairly consistently...
Shooting a soda-can with Winchester 55gr at 100yds pretty consistently while leaning against
a tree... seems like it would be pretty good shooting...
to consistently place shots in a 1" ring at 200yds will very likely take you two years and $5000
of ammo, reloading, various rifles... plus your TIME...
I exaggerate some to make my point...
I'll digress with this story...
A pawnshop near me has a LOT of old odd-lot Golf-Clubs...
I presume that TigerWoods uses the best custom designed golf clubs that anyone can possibly make for him.
I'll wager that if a non-golfing-housewife went and selected 10 clubs from the pawn shop
for Tiger to use and I got to use his custom-clubs... he is most likely to out-play me on every
hole on every course every day we try...
--- if he's so GOOD, why doesn't he score 18-20 on every tournament he plays??
--- why doesn't every quarterBack complete passes like Sammy Baugh (Redskins, early 1950s) ??
--- why doesn't Kasparov or Anand beat every chess opponent at every tournament ??
so... just learn to shoot what you have as best you can...
then when YOU can shoot better than the ammo/rifle... you'll just know if it is the
trigger-squeeze. the barrel length, sight-radius, wind, powder, bullet-Ballistic-Coeffecient...
and can make changes that will improve the CONSISTENCY of your shots,
thus making the shot-placement more accurate...
2. changing to a HollowPt will not change the "accuracy" of the rifle
it will, most likely, change how the rifle propels the bullet and affect the trajectory
of that bullet... such that those HollowPts will land a little Hi/Lo/Rt/Lt of the RoundNose...
the hollowpts will likely be just as "consistent" from your rifle as the roundnose...
but different-trajectory... by just an inch at 100yds... (a modest guess).
3. switching the "brand" of rifle (or ammo... ) will likely make a difference...
withing the close tolerance I spoke previously...
but staying with the same "company/brand" is not assurance that two barrels
will shoot the same .223 ammo "the same"... it's a different chamber/bore
and might put just a little different oomph on the bullets that is CONSISTENT
for THAT rifle... but is DIFFERENT from your other rifle...
I'll get flamed a bit for this, on a NEF forum...
but consider a bolt-action (maybe a Savage/Stevens 200) as an alternate
and learn how the two rifles shoot similar/different
If one rifle with one ammo was "the most accurate"...
you'd know it going to the GunShop... because that'd be the ONLY Rifle/Ammo
for sale... no one would buy the second-rate stuff...
but there is an enormous variety... because various shooters will find a combination
that works well... and continue to use it... another shooter will find a different
combination that works for him... and along the way we each think WE HAVE FOUND THE ONE...
but alas, we have not... we only found another 'one'...
so, as I said before... learn to shoot an affordable ammo and hit a soda can "consistently"
at 100yds... when you're leaning against a tree... and I, for one, will be impressed with
your shooting... but I'm not sure any of us can tell YOU which ammo/rifle to use to be
more accurate than that... it will be what YOU learn and try and find that works for you.
Then I could take YOUR rifle and YOUR ammo and not shoot it as well as you do...
so, if your still reading... it is time to quit.. go clean your rifle and get some rest
and plan another practice session to become a better shooter...
best of luck. keep us posted. if my rambling has bored you, then I apologize...
I'm only trying to say that we can help... up to a point... then YOU have to learn
how YOU can improve your shooting...