As one who is relatively new to the world of shooting high powered rifles, I thought I'd pose this dilemma to the more experienced out there who can tell me if or how I'm full of it. Recently acquired an Mosin-Nagant 1891/30 (as I crowed about here earlier). It's not sporterized or anything so no scope, just the standard Soviet issue iron sights.
Shoots great at 50 yards and under, but as soon as I take it out to the 100 yard range it seems worse than I would expect (4-6 inch groups at least). The rifle hasn't been counterbored as some Mosins are. Muzzle wear seems to be OK, at least from the sense that a bullet won't disappear up to the neck in it. The only real formal firearms instruction I've recieved has been pistol shooting, and to focus on the front sight when making my sight picture. But if I do that with iron sights and an NRA 100yd target, the target disappears when I focus on the front sight. Kind of hard to aim that way.
So I suppose my question is if I can get good groups at 50 yards and not at 100 yards, am I jacked up, is the rifle jacked up, or am I just expecting too much out of a non-scoped weapon?
Shoots great at 50 yards and under, but as soon as I take it out to the 100 yard range it seems worse than I would expect (4-6 inch groups at least). The rifle hasn't been counterbored as some Mosins are. Muzzle wear seems to be OK, at least from the sense that a bullet won't disappear up to the neck in it. The only real formal firearms instruction I've recieved has been pistol shooting, and to focus on the front sight when making my sight picture. But if I do that with iron sights and an NRA 100yd target, the target disappears when I focus on the front sight. Kind of hard to aim that way.
So I suppose my question is if I can get good groups at 50 yards and not at 100 yards, am I jacked up, is the rifle jacked up, or am I just expecting too much out of a non-scoped weapon?