Greg:
I have never been able to see bullet holes at long range so I had no clue about the target. Shooting a small group is a really neat experience but Sam's super nice aggregate (with both guns) was much more difficult and significant than my one group. My heavy gun is actually the most accurate rifle I have fired to date. In practice and load work it has shot very small groups at 100 yards (I know these don't count but they do build confidence). The smallest was .020 near as I could measure it. The important thing to me is that the gun will shoot small with anything I stuff in it. For what it is worth here are the stats on this rifle: Hart barrel 27" unlimited 14 twist, stock 308 Win with .335 neck, Lapua brass, Lapua 155 Scenar moly coated, Win primer, 45.5 gr Re15 powder
The stock is made from Lowes poplar laminated with standard wood glue. The front half of the rifle is an aluminum "I" beam turned on its side with a lot of machining. The bedding is a 7" glued barrel block. Total cost (ignoring my shop time) was about $60.
The action is a stock Remington 700 with a cleaned up bolt. I had to lengthen the bolt handle to clear the wide stock. The scope is a nightforce (good scope but I still can't see bullet holes - might have something to do with 65 year old eyes).
The down side of the day was that the light gun I just put together stinks - vertical city.
This was a good group but Sam kicked both my butt and everyone elses but all over the parking lot all day long in sporting wind conditions.
John Lewis