I agree with this. I have a very similar loading set up, in fact when I loaded the OCW test recently I loaded one, fired it, then loaded the next while the barrel was cooling. I think unless all you do is boiler room shots at woods ranges then it’s nice to have a gun / load that you are confident with, I have head shot out to 170 yards, not something I’d do regularly but if the deer are lying down they tend to be pretty still, with those shots a sub moa gun is important..I enjoy the process of developing accurate loads for my centre fire rifles. Varying bullet types, powder loads, seating depth and so on with the aim off achieving the best results from my firearms. I have a reloading area in my workshop/garage and a shooting bench and a 100 metre range outside the door. When out in the field, something I do three or four times a week, I appreciate the confidence I have in my firearm, the ammunition I'm using and my own ability. I also shoot regularly in comps at two rifle clubs that I am a member of.
A lot of my shooting these days is kangaroo culling. I have permits to shoot on two neighbouring properties as well as my own. Two requirements for the permit are that the kangaroo must be put down with a head shot (brain shot actually, bearing in mind how "easy" it is to shoot the jaw off of the poor bugger) and this at a maximum range of 200 metres. When I know that the combination of rifle, round and me is capable of sub MOA or even sub 0.5 MOA at 100 m off the bench then I'm quite confident in taking the above shots. Sometimes off-hand for the shorter distances otherwise off the Quad or other field-expedient rests, especially for the longer ones.
The other quarry we have a lot of around here is fallow deer. With these the vital zone is larger and a 1 MOA ability is more than sufficient. For foxes and feral cats I aim centre-mass. But again, knowing that my kit is capable of a tighter result doesn't hurt.
Don't sub-optimise. Only settle for the best your equipment is capable of. You owe it to your quarry.
Cheers
Don't sub-optimise. Only settle for the best your equipment is capable of. You owe it to your quarry.
I agree with this. I have a very similar loading set up, in fact when I loaded the OCW test recently I loaded one, fired it, then loaded the next while the barrel was cooling. I think unless all you do is boiler room shots at woods ranges then it’s nice to have a gun / load that you are confident with, I have head shot out to 170 yards, not something I’d do regularly but if the deer are lying down they tend to be pretty still, with those shots a sub moa gun is important..
Accuracy is a tricky topic. For me I want a rifle / scope combination that will hit an iPhone sized target at a typical range I will be shooting with the first shot from a cold barrel from a field position. If I can shoot a group of five shots, each from a cold barrel into that sized target that is good enough for any deer that walks. My rifles does with ease at 100m.
When shooting groups choice of target makes a big difference especially with thicker reticuled Low power hunting type scopes.
That is an interesting point on targets - my scopes cover a bullseye at 100m pretty much so without clamping the rifle it is difficult to know how accurate it actually is. Even if I hold properly etc it’s difficult to be sure I was aiming at the same spot to maybe half an inch. So other than clamping the gun, I am not sure I can ever really know exactly how accurate the gun is down to the margins of error we are talking.
not that it matters to me too much, as above - iPhone size is fine! But I would like to know which targets would be best suited for these hunting scopes if it would help.
I agree completely with your ending comment, when u are using a rifle.that you're comfortable with, it is easier to clear your mind of worries and slow the breathing and heartbeat and get into that flow state where.you could damn near shoot eyes closed and put it in the DOA zone. Once I got comfortable with my jiu jitsu, or aith roping off the back of my horse, theres timea i feel I cant lose. My 17hmr does that for me. I could put 5 rounds in a <1 grouping Consistently. But I also put ton of rounds thru it to get that comfortableIts odd how these things afflict us. I gave terrible trigger freeze on shotguns unless I shoot gun down and yet never on rifles, but do get the odd dose of buck fever. Also of note are the moments when you are in the zone and get a zen like sense of certainty of the kill and it all happens as planned. Having a rifle that you are confident in is part of that state of mind.