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There are five parts to this series. They will be linked here at the end of today's editing session:
PART ONE
PART TWO
PART THREE
PART FOUR
PART FIVE
Rifle: HW-98, 0.20
Optic: SWFA 10
Test Pellet: H&N Baracuda at about 688 fps
Distance: 25 meters.
First I shot five different pellets to determine which one shot the worst. That fell to the H&N Baracudas.
I shot 30 shots to create each of the following aggregate targets. I then scored the groups and removed the five worst shots from each of the data sets. I did that because I was testing outside and wanted to minimize wind drift errors. I maintained three wind flags between myself and the target at 25 meters.
I first shot the group directly from the tin. Here it is.
The most important measurement here is the mean radius. This is the measurement which best describes the performance of the sample set. Observe these pellets represent the average performance for that tin of pellets.
I used my printer to make a Yrrah Pellet Roller and a catch box with seven cells in it. This let me capture pellets quickly and sort them by rolling into several groups at one pass. When rolling pellets they fall into a pattern which is a normal curve (bell curve).. My catch box was made with seven cells and so it was easy to select all the pellets which fell into the middle of the curve. All of the pellets fell into five of the cells in the catch box. I selected ONLY pellets from the CENTER box with no concern for which pellets might actually shoot best in the rifle. I just wanted to see if I could improve the performance of the pellets by rolling them in this manner.
Here is that target.
Now then that left me with the pellets which fell "above" the middle group and the pellets which fell "below" he middle group. I lumped them together with the expectation that the resulting group would indeed be worse than the average. That expectation may or may not have been a good theory. This is the result.
Here is that group.
From these tests I conclude that the Yrrah-Roll test, invented by user Yrrah on the GTA forum a few years ago offers a substantial improvement in accuracy by simply selecting pellets which tend to shoot closer to the same point from a batch of random pellets. The pellets which fall into the same slot in the catch box shoot to the same point of impact on the target.
EDIT: At this point the above conclusion was not warranted by this data. The the data does not show a significant improvement in accuracy. It suggests an improvement but certainly does not conclusively confirm it. I have redone the test indoors and started another thread (Part 2) which will be linked at the top of this thread.
Aim Small
PART ONE
PART TWO
PART THREE
PART FOUR
PART FIVE
Rifle: HW-98, 0.20
Optic: SWFA 10
Test Pellet: H&N Baracuda at about 688 fps
Distance: 25 meters.
First I shot five different pellets to determine which one shot the worst. That fell to the H&N Baracudas.
I shot 30 shots to create each of the following aggregate targets. I then scored the groups and removed the five worst shots from each of the data sets. I did that because I was testing outside and wanted to minimize wind drift errors. I maintained three wind flags between myself and the target at 25 meters.
I first shot the group directly from the tin. Here it is.
The most important measurement here is the mean radius. This is the measurement which best describes the performance of the sample set. Observe these pellets represent the average performance for that tin of pellets.
I used my printer to make a Yrrah Pellet Roller and a catch box with seven cells in it. This let me capture pellets quickly and sort them by rolling into several groups at one pass. When rolling pellets they fall into a pattern which is a normal curve (bell curve).. My catch box was made with seven cells and so it was easy to select all the pellets which fell into the middle of the curve. All of the pellets fell into five of the cells in the catch box. I selected ONLY pellets from the CENTER box with no concern for which pellets might actually shoot best in the rifle. I just wanted to see if I could improve the performance of the pellets by rolling them in this manner.
Here is that target.
Now then that left me with the pellets which fell "above" the middle group and the pellets which fell "below" he middle group. I lumped them together with the expectation that the resulting group would indeed be worse than the average. That expectation may or may not have been a good theory. This is the result.
Here is that group.
EDIT: At this point the above conclusion was not warranted by this data. The the data does not show a significant improvement in accuracy. It suggests an improvement but certainly does not conclusively confirm it. I have redone the test indoors and started another thread (Part 2) which will be linked at the top of this thread.
Aim Small