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Competition, Tactics & Training
Shooting Chat
bad barrel or other gremlins?...
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<blockquote data-quote="doorgunner" data-source="post: 2272463" data-attributes="member: 18486"><p>I know your trying to figure out if its the scope or rifle, so let me ask this;doe the rifle have any type of back up or iron sights? If the answer is yes, totally remove the scope from the equation. Set up a target at 25 yards( you heard right) and fire 5 rounds, do not adjust the sights between rounds. Then see where you hit, adjust and do it again. If all the shoots are in what you would call an acceptable group ( everybody has their own idea on what that is), then it's your scope or mounts. If it still is all over the place, it's the rifle. Now is where the utility of ar's come into play. Borrow another persons rifle( if you don't know anybody, there are plenty of people here that will meet you for this), and swap the uppers and lowers of the rifles. This should narrow down things even more. You can now isolate the problem to either the upper components or lower components.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="doorgunner, post: 2272463, member: 18486"] I know your trying to figure out if its the scope or rifle, so let me ask this;doe the rifle have any type of back up or iron sights? If the answer is yes, totally remove the scope from the equation. Set up a target at 25 yards( you heard right) and fire 5 rounds, do not adjust the sights between rounds. Then see where you hit, adjust and do it again. If all the shoots are in what you would call an acceptable group ( everybody has their own idea on what that is), then it's your scope or mounts. If it still is all over the place, it's the rifle. Now is where the utility of ar's come into play. Borrow another persons rifle( if you don't know anybody, there are plenty of people here that will meet you for this), and swap the uppers and lowers of the rifles. This should narrow down things even more. You can now isolate the problem to either the upper components or lower components. [/QUOTE]
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