22 lr groups

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My real belief is, all that really matters in the end is that the shooter is enjoying herself or himself regardless of the shooting method they choose to employ. If they like to shoot off a bench and they have a good time doing it what is wrong with that? If they like to stand , sit , kneel or shoot from prone - more power to them. If their targets are cans or clumps of dirt and they never shoot a paper target in their life so what? As long as they are having fun who really cares?

It's not enough with all the negativity guns/gun owners receive from the media , many Hollywood actors and anti-gun politicians. It seems that fellow gun owners are the ones who are quickest to "put down" another shooter's type of gun , shooting style or "lack" of skill.

At the range we can all have a good time and share in enjoyment of shooting with fellow gun owners regardless of the shooting position that one chooses.
 
I bought a Ballard Rifle made Winchester Low Wall in .22 with a 30” Douglas Air-Gauged match barrel. I had it built to mirror my BPCR Silhouette rifle in weight and balance.

At 50 yards it will hold under 1 MOA.

At 100 yards, off cross sticks (as shot in a match), using MVA tang sights and an aperture front sight, I can generally hold about 1.5-2MOA on a reduced size animal silhouette. These are 10 shot strings using Eley Standard. I’ve gotten some very good 1 MOA groups, but that was with very little variable wind. I find it extremely important to use a very sensitive windflag to catch the subtle changes.

Chuck
 
I'm happy with 1" groups at 25 yards from my bone stock 10/22, standing, with irons:cool:

some of these groups are incredible though!
 
This group shot with my Remington 541S with a 6.5X20 Leupold scope, computer challanged, photo of rifle to follow.

IMG
 
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