TJC wrote:The harder part to answer is whether you can load and shoot them to a high enough standard to notice the difference in their ballistics.
It's a good question. IMHO for TR it's probably marginal and you're only likely to be able to perceive a difference if you're a top flight shot (see my logic below) however for F-TR and F-Class you may be able to tell the difference more easily given the smaller achievable hold.
If we think about 1000 yards, with a good ammunition/rifle combo your average TR shooter probably holds over 2moa for a ten shot group*. A Palma Team shooter will hold 1 moa, maybe 3/4moa on a good day. The larger the basic group, the harder it is to realistically distinguish whether a wide shot is the result of an error by the shooter or a wind change. For example, if we consider our 2moa shooter, they will not reliably be able to perceive a wind change of less than 1 moa just by looking at where their shots fall**.
Now if we consider the difference between the Berger and the Sierra bullets, which works out a 0.5moa for 10moa wind change (as calculated using the excellent JBM Ballistics page at
http://www.jbmballistics.com/) so is going to be less than 1/4moa for your typical 2-3moa wind change at 1000 yards, which just gets swamped by the group size.
Cheers,
Gaz
* Lots of people think they hold better than they actually do. They're generally (but not always) deluding themselves through a mixture of optimism, selective memory and bad plotting. The 1 moa figure comes from a careful examination of all of the GB plots from the 2007 Palma Match.
** This a common cause of people going outside the bullseye one side, making a wind change and immediately going out the other side. The first shot was actually just a wide shot in their group and not actually a wind change.