Went shooting today and decide to apply the measurments to see what I have. I was testing a Nitro for Black load using a MHCC with a Parker Hale tang mounted peep sight.
Here is the 50 yard 12 shot group I got. Greatest spread ctc is easy, 4.825
Time for mean radius.
Quote from 303smle on 11/19/05 at 3:11am:It appears, in the US at least, that the Mean Radius is not the same as Figure of Merit. �The following is from Hatcher�s Notebook, pages 412 and 413.
� � � � � Mean Radius is the average distance of all the shots from the center of the group. �It is usually about one third the group diameter.
� � To obtain the mean radius of a shot group, measure the heights of all shots above an arbitrarily chosen horizontal line. �Average these measurements. �The result is the height of the center of group above the chosen line. �Then in the same way get the horizontal distance of the center from the vertical line, such as for instance, the left edge of the target. �These two measurements will locate the center of the group.
� � Now measure the distance of each shot from this center. �The average of these measurements is the Mean Radius.
This is a bunch of work to calculate, but I finally came up with 1.8 inches mean radius.
Then following these instructions and then checking my own copy of Hatchers I tried to compute figure of merit.
Quote: Figure of Merit. �A method adopted by the Ordnance Department in 1923 for evaluating very small groups. �It is obtained as follows: �Draw a vertical line through the lowest shot in the group, also through the shot furthest to the left. Add the distance from the bottom lines to the highest shot to that from the vertical line to the shot furthest to the right. �Divide by two.
I drew the verticle line through the lowest shot.
Then I drew a verticle line through the left shot.
The next step doesn't make sense.
Quote:Add the distance from the bottom lines to the highest shot to that from the vertical line to the shot furthest to the right.
That's what is says in the book also.
What?