I shot this target today in very slight breeze(almost calm). 10 shots at 100 yards:
That upper left , best of the card , is differently a ground squirrel getter.
Yes, I agree there. There was mathematical discussion shared on here a few weeks ago, I think it was linked by Utah airguns, but was originally by Bryan Litz, It basically explains the statistics behind what you said (that I just quoted) and what Mike Nisch also alluded to a few comments ago.So does everybody agree that this is NOT a 100 yard sub-MOA gun/scope/ammo combo, even though it DID shoot 1 ten shot group that was sub-MOA at 100 yards?
And would you agree that this IS a 100 yard 2 MOA gun/scope/ammo under these conditions?
The one data point you fall back on is the XFT, with a small amount of scores shooting slugs out of a majority pellets for comparison…A couple thoughts....
First off, you're shooting 10 shot groups. Not often to see anybody sharing 10 shot groups at 100 yards, with slugs or pellets. So, your groups are already statistically going to be larger than all the cherrypickers showing up with their 100 yard sub-moa 5 shot group and trying to act like that is just the norm for their rig.
Yes, I agree there. There was mathematical discussion shared on here a few weeks ago, I think it was linked by Utah airguns, but was originally by Bryan Litz, It basically explains the statistics behind what you said (that I just quoted) and what Mike Nisch also alluded to a few comments ago.
I started this thread over a year ago, questioning the trend towards slugs and the FACT that the slug shooters weren't shooting better scores at 100 yard Xtreme Field Target. https://www.airgunnation.com/threads/the-trend-towards-slugs.923817/
Well, it's been roughly 18 months since that post, with many monthly matches, and we still aren't seeing slugs outshoot the high BC pellets. Part of that is the fact that folks rarely show up to shoot slugs, but part of that is also the fact that folks are rarely brave enough to show up to shoot slugs. I wonder why?
I've said it before, I'm not anti-slug and would love to see a big leap in external ballistics capabilities for the airgun shooting hobby, But I have not seen the huge benefits of slugs that seems to be such a prevalent claim on the airgun forums these days. On paper, yes, slugs should be better. But you still gotta hit what you're aiming at for it to count.
So, back to the original question.....I think your 100 yard slug groups in calm conditions are not better than what most guys are CLAMING, but are likely MUCH, MUCH, MUCH better than what most guys are actually shooting. And if somebody wants to fight the "slugs are better" argument, please start with showing us 5 or 6, 10 shot groups at 100 yards like the OP did.
Hey Mike, You working overnight shifts too?The one data point you fall back on is the XFT, with a small amount of scores shooting slugs out of a majority pellets for comparison…
But how about a much larger comparison slugs to pellets, such as the PRS (NRL-22) match at RMAC? There were 80 shooters (Pro Division) and targets were from 20 yards to 200 yards. The shooter had the option of shooting pellets or slugs….
The shooter that WON the pellet class last year (2021 had two classes, pellet and slug) shot pellets again this year and finished 18th, and was the highest pellet shooter. All 17 shooters above him shot slugs! And remember, they had the choice of pellets or slugs.
At the NRL-22 Nationals, shooters could shoot pellets or slugs. All of them shot slugs. Slug technology is improving so fast that what was true even two years ago is no longer the case. Guys that are shooting PRS type matches are shooting slugs that have BCs of 0.12, maybe even better. With 100 yard accuracy in no wind conditions equivalent to pellets.
Another case would be the Benchrest Sihlouette (BRS) matches shot monthly near Waco Texas. There are two pellets classes, 35 and 80 FPE, and a slug class. The Slug class has produced the highest scores every match since they started allowing slugs.
I love shooting XFT, but the vast majority of shooters choose pellets because slugs aren’t allowed at the EBR EFT GP finals, nor can GP points be earned at seasonal events leading up to the finals. And let’s face it, the top EFT shooters are shooting pellets, not slugs, plus EFT only goes out to 100 yards. IMHO the argument was settled at RMAC 2022, slugs were vastly superior to pellets…