by Wapiti » 03 Jun 2025, 6:53 am
If you have a quality barrel, you do not need to wait at all between shots in a group.
If you have to wait between shots, other than working the action and re-establishing point of aim, you are actually cheating and giving yourself a false outcome.
In other words, you're trying to make up for your equipment being inconsistent as it heats up.
The barrel is just a piece of steel alloy with a hole drilled in it and rifling formed by whatever method has been used. If the barrel has no stress present from this process, or has been stress relieved, it will not walk it's shots or shoot a larger group as it warms.
If it does, it has stresses present in the metal which presents itself in changing POI when it heats up.
There is another VERY common reason that this happens, which is mostly never explained because the gun reviewers or posters know nothing about how this effects consistency (what's new). That is that too many mass produced barrels have their bores off-centre to the external profile by quite a margin. Which I almost guarantee that you cannot see with the naked eye and can only tell when you clock the bore centreline in a lathe to do accurate work on it.
Then as the barrel heats up, because one side of the stress-filled barrel heats up, it starts moving in the direction it is weakest in, or in which the stresses push it.
That's why the heavier you go in a barrel, the less you see it. And also, why some pencil thin barrels do not show this occurring. More care and steps taken during manufacture.
You will find out what you got by just shooting 5 shots without trying to skew the results by waiting for a barrel to cool to the same temp each time.
Think about it - in the field, if you have to take 5 shots quickly, accurately, do you wait between shots then too?