Mike:
The mechanical accuracy of the rifle as a system is the same in both sports. Our targets are larger to include the limitations of a human’s ability to hold, but we (prone shooters) still require a rifle to produce the same mechanical accuracy you do.
My accuracy standard to be competitive in prone shooting for the last 20+ years (mechanical accuracy, from a bench, with as little human error as possible) has been .400” outside edge – aggregate accuracy for (10) five shot groups, in calm conditions, at 50 meters. If your system is not at or very near this standard, you will not win at the highest levels of the sport. The rifle I used in 2008 was a consistent .415” rifle.
This seems to correlate with a standard you can relate too (from Mr. Calfee, recently):
“Friend ifidned:
You've asked a question I'm not sure I have a good answer for......is there a group size standard that I use to deside if I will put my name on a gun? No....
But if I sat down and tested one of my rifles, or pistols, at 50 yards, and fired 10-five shot groups and measured them, I'd put my name on it, if it would agg .200" or under....
Your friend, Bill Calfee”
Prone shooters can tolerate no more inaccuracy that BR shooters Mike, we have the same expectations for our equipment as you do. And yes, the challenge I offered was intended to be “tounge in cheek”. If you completely remove the human hold error, I would expect Mr. Camper to shoot X’s all day long (especially INDOORS), did I mention she did it IN conditions?
Oh, and I would absolutely LOVE to try BR shooting, and fully expect to be completely humbled. Not because of my equipment, but because of my very limited benchrest skill. Care to sling up your benchrest rifle?
Take care,
kev