So Whats Your Group Size?

This is also with a Kimber CC Target Stainless .45
I just got her sighted in yesterday and shot this group off the bench. The upper group is 1.42" I'm really happy.:D
I know the gun is capable of repeating this group.
Let's see if the operator is...:barf:
 

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Hemicuda, Your country needs you for the Olympic games.

If that doesn't interest you, you could be winning some big money in the practical pistol shoots, IPSC and such. You might need to pollish your speed skills but in an event like the Masters (that I assume they still shoot) precision is a large part of it.

Did you have to get that S&W and Beretta semiauto worked on to shoot that well? Did it take much load development or load searching to find combinations that were that accurate?
 
It'd the DIAMETER of a circle drawn AROUND the "group" ...

the circle needs to be UNBROKEN by the holes in the target...

Actually, true measurement of group size is that circle minus the diameter of the bullet being fired. If you measure it your way, a perfect group where all rounds went exactly through the same hole would be measured as whatever caliber you were shooting. If benchrest shooters had to measure your way, it would set them back 20 years! Normal group size for those guys at 100 yards is smaller than the diameter of their bullets, try telling them to do it your way! :)
 
This is what is referred to as 48 out of 50, the hard way.


Does anyone else have this problem? This was from target #12 during a 60 shot 10meter ISSF air pistol match. I looked through my scope, saw the 4 tens, and then proceeded to shoot that 8. It's not even a good 8 either, its more like a 7 on steriods.


PS one handed :cool:
 

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