Tim Singleton
Member
I think their bullets have a lot to do with it
How many non ctf actually do buy 20 barrels at a time and spend the time finding the winners? How many actually do put in the time that Tony Boyer does? Call me crazy but I just doubt that many non top 20 shooters actually put in the same time and $$$..
Barrels do not make a winning rifle. You have to have a good rifle before you spend money on 30 barrels. What I'm sayin' here is that the rifle is the bigger battle. Good rifles can find good barrels while a lesser rifle can't. There's no telling how many good barrels spend their entire lifetime shooting .292s because of the rifle. A very typical characteristic of a lousy rifle is that they often shoot a really good group....or place third in an agg. This characteristic causes the competitor to believe it's him, rather than anything else, that lost. Another typical situation is the rifle that needs constant tuning to shoot well...not good but a little better.
What makes a good rifle? Darned if I know! I just know that you have to get your hands on one somehow to be one of those guys Hunter speaks of.
How many non ctf actually do buy 20 barrels at a time and spend the time finding the winners? How many actually do put in the time that Tony Boyer does? Call me crazy but I just doubt that many non top 20 shooters actually put in the same time and $$$..
Hunter, is it possible that the answer to your question, has been touched on in one or some of the many responses in this discussion?
Probably so, but in so many different ways that it's not clear.
Out of curiosity, I wonder if we could do a survey and get an idea of how many rounds a year we shoot? I'll start, the last three years I've averaged about 1,900 rounds of SR BR-type shooting (and my results are not pretty).