In regards to that fantastic read titled "Secrets of the Houston Warehouse", I have a question about bullet jump. I hear that the old lore was, the most accurate combinations pretty much always involve jam and not jump. Even in that article. But now, I see that jump is the new trend, reading articles like the one Mark Gordon wrote a few years ago. Though, how can the exact opposites give the exact same results? Am I missing the context? Meaning do .22ppc's fired out of 21" benchrest guns have completely different requirements than say 6.5 creeds do out of 26" barrels? I'm guessing they do, but how different can guns and bullets really be? I mean I know "one bullet may like jam and the other bullet jump." yea, I got all that, but these guys aren't talking in terms of evvvvverything's different and you must experiment. Most guys on a firing line shooting bench rest in say the 1980's were pretty much running very similar set ups and calibers. When the new fad was jamming the bullets, everyone started doing it on all their calibers, and still shooting SUPER small groups. So even though 'every guns different', in terms I'm asking of, they're really not.
I guess trends can really confuse people in the end, because when you see super high level shooters of today, saying how the old ways weren't really producing the precision we have today, I tend to disagree; Mcmillan's .009 5 shot group size was shot in 1973, with pretty much none of the equipment we have now. So who's right?
I guess trends can really confuse people in the end, because when you see super high level shooters of today, saying how the old ways weren't really producing the precision we have today, I tend to disagree; Mcmillan's .009 5 shot group size was shot in 1973, with pretty much none of the equipment we have now. So who's right?