three shot groups is all i can afford... betcha if i do my part dead critter....
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three shot groups is all i can afford... betcha if i do my part dead critter....
Ok.....I can buy that...... So if I was to zero at 100 with X number of shots,The confirm at 250-300 with another X number of shots...I will have satisfied both criteria.... Because I seldom shoot past 300m 350 at most..by eyetrometer....that is more than good enough for what I do. So I will respectfully disagree with original assumption/ presumption/statement and contend that rather than useless...they have some use/merit.
About 2 or 3 times a year il shoot a few rds at 300 n 400yds,just to make sure my scope n rifle are on song.But most deer are inside 320-330 yds so I have no problem smacking one over out there at distance if the shot is on.
no
We use shorthand/abbreviations/approximations in language all the time e.g. “about 20 minutes away”, “not far from here”. This way of speaking prioritises rapid communication of ideas over absolute precision. This language is both common and useful; however, may not be fit for purpose when a higher level of precision is demanded e.g. communicating an important dimension on a building design.
To my way of thinking, this concept is parallel to the discussion of firearm accuracy and precision. If you want to know your true cone of fire (i.e. precision) or your true zero (i.e. accuracy), you will need a sufficient sample size to give you a proper representation of this. A relevant question then becomes - do you need to know your ‘true’ cone of fire or your ‘true’ zero?
I think it has been established, that in many cases the answer is no (i.e. when shooting deer-sized targets at moderate ranges). Therefore, in many cases an approximation (e.g. the three shot group) will probably suffice. However, if your demand for precision is high (e.g. longer range/smaller target); the details naturally become more important. It also follows that if your true cone of fire is small to begin with (i.e. you have a high level of precision), every sample is inherently closer to the mean so to speak, so again a three shot group may actually be a reasonable representation of that system.
It seems part of the debate occurs when people perceive any discussion of larger sample sizes as some sort of prescription you have to follow, rather than seeing it as simply a statistical fact about increasing resolution with more samples, and the inherent problems of small samples.
Persistence is one description
All can be achieved with 10 mins of easy reading without the accompanying condescension.
I actually want everyone else to shoot worse and less successfully.
Right, enough about my many and various personal shortcomings, let's look at some 3-shot groups. Last week.
This is a pretty normal data set. Standard T3 7mm08 with a handload, leupold scope, expert shooter (much better qualifications than me), off the bench at 105m. No wind to speak of. Getting a zero for <300m hunting.
Whole target:
Attachment 286283
First 3 shot group - 0.87 MOA - adjusted up 1.0MOA and right 1.5MOA after this.
Attachment 286284
Second 3 shot group - 1.08MOA - adjusted up 0.5MOA and right 0.5MOA after this
Attachment 286285
Third 3 shot group - probably good enough for the purpose.
Attachment 286286
We can use the data from this exercise to undertake some analysis. I adjusted all the shot for their position to have a common point of reference - translating groups 1 and 2 by the total adjustments to overlay them on group 3.
This analysis does make the assumption that the scope is functional. If the scope has a relatively massive error, like 10%, then the analysis is still broadly correct. If the scope is total junk and just does not track at all, then the analysis might be questionable.
Here's what we get.
Precision:
The rifle shot 3x 3 shot groups averaging 1.09 MOA. Pretty good. The combined group of all 9 shots is 71.5mm, or 2.3 MOA.
The mean radius of the 9-shot sample from a common point of reference is 19.8mm with an SD of 11.9mm (+- 9.1mm @ 95% CI)
This mean radius means that the total dispersion of the rifle is around 82.3mm (2.7MOA). (44 - 120mm @ 95% CI)
Accuracy:
The MPOI of all 9 shots is at +1.8mm (+- 18.8mm @ 95% CI) for windage, and +2.8mm (+- 15.3mm @ 95% CI) for elevation.
We can be highly confident that it's zeroed within 2 clicks in each direction. That's good for the intended purpose. We cannot be more confident than that.
The mean POI of group 1 (adjusted) is 17mm right of the 9-shot MPOI, and 13mm high.
The mean POI of group 2 (adjusted) is 13mm left of the 9-shot MPOI, and 13mm low.
The mean POI of group 3 (adjusted) is 3mm left of the 9-shot MPOI, and almost pefect for elevation.
So one of the 3-rnd groups accurately matches the best estimate we have of the true MPOI within 2 clicks in each direction, the other 2 are about 2 clicks off in both directions.
This is a handy example of getting a zero that's suitable for hunting at conventional ranges using 3 shot groups with a rifle of pretty average precision. Very normal situation. We can pool all the data and have an understanding of exactly how confident in it we can be, and for what.
You'll notice, @Micky Duck, that 2 of the 3x 3-shot group MPOIs are far more than 20mm apart - you indicated that you've never seen this in 50 years, but this is not unusual with systems with average precision and small samples.
It's a dead deer....
Look ive read all 20 pages . Im not stupid ( I don't think ) . I just don't get it. if I shot that group above I'd be suicidal . I shot a couple of 3 shot groups with handloads last week. Both were touching . I went hunting and shot a couple of deer. What am i missing ?