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Accuracy Testing

6-6-2018 < SGT Report 85 796 words
 

by Pat Cascio, Survival Blog:


Readers contact me all the time about how I conduct my accuracy testing. Even though I spell it out in my articles, I still get the same questions. I make no claims to having any special power, when it comes to shooting. I just shoot a lot, and I’ve been professionally trained in long gun and handgun shooting.


What I Do With My Handgun Tests
Here’s what I do with my handgun tests. After I’m about halfway through breaking-in a gun for an article, I’ll conduct my accuracy testing. For this I use a rolled-up sleeping bag (usually) over the hood of my pickup. The target is at 25 yards. I’ll load five rounds in a magazine, hunker down as best I can, and fire those five rounds for accuracy. If I feel I pulled a shot or two, I’ll do the shooting again.


I Have Some Really Bad Days
Quite honestly, I just have some really bad days. When this happens, I’ll come back another day to conduct accuracy testing. I don’t want to report a gun/ammo combo is giving me 10-inch groups, when I know I’m at fault.


Accuracy Testing Takes a Lot of Time
Honestly, the accuracy testing takes up a lot of time, especially if I’m shooting maybe ten different loads through a gun. All of the loads get tested, and it’s very time consuming!


Measuring Groups
Some gun writers take great pleasure in measuring groups down to ten thousandths of an inch. That’s crazy, if you ask me. I try to round off my groups to the nearest 1/8th of an inch. And, oftentimes, there is no clear cut winner when it comes to accuracy. In this case, I’ll report it as a tie or too close to call. For my needs and most of us, a mere fraction of an inch difference really won’t matter in a real-life, real-world shooting. This is just my two cents worth.


Carry Most Accurate Loads
I like to carry the most accurate loads I can in my handguns, but this isn’t always possible. When testing a gun/ammo combo, a FMJ round might be the most accurate, by far. However, it isn’t suitable for self defense or hunting purposes. In that case, I’ll take a pass on it being the best load to carry and go to a better self-defense round, even though it isn’t always the most accurate load tested.


Different Guns Shoot Different
To be sure, different guns shoot different loads better than others. I’ve had identical guns, and when testing the same ammo, usually one handgun will shoot better than the other. There is not a big surprise there.


Better One Day Than Another
I’m only human, and as such I make mistakes, or better yet I’m just better one day than another, when it comes to accuracy. One day the XYZ load will give me the best group. Then, the following day, using the same gun/ammo combo, the XYZ load isn’t the most accurate load even though I’m using the same gun and same ammo as the day before.


Shooting Done on the Same Day
My time is very limited, when it comes to firearms articles. So, these days I make every attempt to get all my shooting done on the same day. If I have to come back another day, I’m losing money. Sometimes I have volunteer helpers. There is never a lack of volunteers, when it comes to shooting a new gun and free ammo. But more often than not, I’m shooting alone. Even though some of my helpers might shoot for groupings, it is only my groups that I report. I’m the writer, and I’m the last word when it comes to my articles.


My Testing Results
Now, just because the XYZ ammo load beat out the ABC ammo load during my testing, it doesn’t necessarily mean that the XYZ load is more accurate or “better” than the ABC load. It just means that, in my testing, the XYZ load beat out the ABC load on that day and with that particular gun with me behind the trigger. That’s all it means. Plus, I’ve never used a Ranson Rest to test for accuracy. I prefer the rolled-up sleeping bag setup, which gives me a better idea of real-world accuracy. Many readers will write and say, after reading a gun article, that when they shot the same gun with the same ammo, they didn’t get groups like mine or any other gun writer’s groups. Most of the time, they are standing and not resting the gun. Thus, they get larger groups. That’s all there is to it! Take the time to rest a gun, and you’ll get tighter groups.


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