Did some shooting with my new (to me) Super Blackhawk 71/2 barrel.
Load was 240gr kieth style cast bullet over 20gr. of 2400. I have some 250gr. keith bullets ordered and want to try them also.
Shot at 25, 50 and 100 yards. Only had one target so I hope it shows up ok.
I've not done much long range shoot (100 yrd) with a revolver and am hoping to join the handgun hunters fraternity this next fall.
Is this an acceptable group for 100 yards, or should I try and make it better. To be honest, I was pretty pleased with it.
Whatya say?
It looks good to me BUT... Is anything ever acceptable to a shooter?
I think it just becomes a cost vs. reward issue rather than saying "I don't want anything more accurate".
No before I continue... let me restate this... It looks good to me.
Ok, lets continue...
The best way to improve accuracy on a cast bullet gun is to do the following:
1) Take measurements of the following:
a) each cylinder throat
b) the bore at the threaded part of the barrell
c) the bore at the middle of the barrell
d) the bore at the muzzle.
2) Uniform the cylinder throats to a size that is larger than B, C & D
3) By fire lapping the barrell, make B bigger than C and C bigger than D.
4) Either cast your own bullets, LBT moulds are the best, or order your bullets sized to A. Even better is to order your bullets unsized and unlubed so you can size and lube them with LBT Blue.
5) Take care of the action basics that a novice can pretty much do with some instruction like:
a) adjust endshake & headspacing
b) trigger job
c) oversize base pin
Frankly, this is what I do to every single one of my Ruger SBHs... I do it all myself except for honing the cylinder ($50-$75).
SA
PS. All the stuff you need for the measuring and lapping I'd recommend getting from LBT.