The S&B is a 200-grain fmj bullet listed at 1060 feet per second. Did pretty good on accuracy
four out of six almost one big hole. The problem I ran into was that when fired without a suppressor, it would not cycle the bolt far enough to pick up the next round. With the can it did, but not far enough back to lock the bolt when the last round was fired. This rifle had a adjustable gas block, I'd imagine that opening it up a click or two would take care of that.On the Sig, it's a 205-grain soft-point listed at 1000 fps. I only had five rounds of this(see 'short ammo test' above), all fired in one group.
Four of the five in one big hole, not bad, and a little higher point of impact than the S&B. To me it sounded a touch sharper/louder, and it did cycle the action with no problem.By the way, 'sharper/louder' doesn't mean much, according to a guy outside both were quite quiet, I'd say outdoors you could've fired both with no ear protection.
Did one more test, this on the Strike Eagle scope on the rifle. It has a dot as the main aiming point with several stadia lines below. The S&B, using the first line below the dot, was on a 30 yards.
2 comments:
What range to the targets? 100 yards?
Dammit, should've posted that earlier on: 30 yards, indoor range.
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