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308 Win and heavy bullets

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7 comments

  • mstrblaster
    I didn't mention I'm using 165gr BT Spitz from Nosler and 168gr Hornady A-max bullets. I realize not many of the books show Reloader 15, but my shooting buddy swears by it, so I thought I'd try it.
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  • Hawk Carse
    You might get better accuracy with a different bullet. Try some Sierra MK. Changing powders does not usually make large changes in accuracy.
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  • nononsense
    mstrblaster,

    Some additional information would be helpful.

    Barrel Length?

    Gas system length?

    Brake or can?

    Shooting platform? (what type of rest and where. Truck hood, bench, sand bags, bipod, etc.)

    These are not bolt action rifles, they're gas guns.

    Most AR10s will not group in the proverbial 'one-hole' ever. It's the nature of the beast. There are and always will be a few exceptions but there are not consistent one-hole shooters, just one group as a rarity.

    I had one of the original AR10T (target model) which ate Federal Gold Medal Match 168 gr. like a bandit. It was simple to get 1/2" groups off sand bags from a bench at 100 yards consistently. But to show agreement with my point, I bought two (2) more and neither would shoot anywhere close to that first one no matter what hoops I jumped through.

    Post some more information and let's see if we can help you get some better groups.

    Best.
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  • mstrblaster
    It has a 20" chrome barrel with a muzzle brake. I'm not sure how to measure the Gas system...

    I can get the holes to touch on the paper at 100yds. I'm shooting off of a shooting bench using sand bags, and sometimes a Leadsled (or something simular).

    I realize most rifles of this type aren't meant to be tac-drivers. Mine is awesome so far, I just want to get rid of the flier which only comes out one out of 7 or 10 rounds or so.

    Thanks!!
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  • Mobuck
    There are more one hole rifles that there are one hole shooters.
    The violent operation of a semiauto has the possible side affect of lowering the accuracy depending on how the ammo is assembled. If you are checking your group size between shots you may be seeing a good groups at 2 or 4 shots and winging the next one due to loss of concentration.
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  • Okie743
    4 to 5 inchs out is a bad flyer!

    I've seen mis-matched hulls cause flyer, but usually not 4-5 inch flyers. I take care in preparing my hulls for best accuracy so as to help eliminate flyers! (matched weight, champhering inside primer holes, etc)

    Also take notice of which direction the flyer is off target! If it's in the same direction, trying rotating the scope 90 degrees and re-test and see if the flyer shifts 90 degrees! If it does it's the scope![:(]

    If the above don't help, look for a load that shifts your normal grouping toward the direction of the flyer and when you find such fine tune the load for best accuracy![8D]
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  • Rocky Raab
    There's one misconception in the original post I should address: longer bullets are LESS stable, not more. The reason long bullets need a faster twist is to improve stability. Both the added length and the reduced velocity lower the bullet's stability. To get it back, you have to increase twist or velocity.
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