First shot flyers: how do biatheletes prevent them
Posted: Thu Dec 14, 2017 10:43 am
Hello,
I am not a biathlete, but I think that your community is in the unique position to offer other rimfire shooters some advice here. The problem of first shot flyers (FSF) is often the topic on rimfire forms. By FSF I mean a flyer blamable on a cold but fouled bore, not a clean one. (Everyone expects a flyer on the first shot or two out of a cold and completely clean barrel.) I know that FSF also occur in expensive target and bench rest rifles, and that’s where you come in. You all use the finest match rifles with match chambers and shoot the most accurate ammunition. But match grade ammo is heavily lubed, and I find that this lube in cold weather often causes FSF. This happens with one of my guns, which is by no mean a match rifle; below 50 degrees Fahrenheit the first shot hits about an inch low if the barrel has cooled for more than 10 minutes. The various target disciplines allow you to warm up your barrel before shooting for score. But biathletes shoot in much colder weather and cannot shoot sighters or warmup shots, right? So how do you keep the first shot with the rest of the group? Do you use ammo with a special lube. I have read that Eley has all weather lube and makes a special round for biathlons. Like biathletes, small game hunters like myself cannot take warmup shots.
I would much appreciate your collective wisdom here.
Thanks,
541S
I am not a biathlete, but I think that your community is in the unique position to offer other rimfire shooters some advice here. The problem of first shot flyers (FSF) is often the topic on rimfire forms. By FSF I mean a flyer blamable on a cold but fouled bore, not a clean one. (Everyone expects a flyer on the first shot or two out of a cold and completely clean barrel.) I know that FSF also occur in expensive target and bench rest rifles, and that’s where you come in. You all use the finest match rifles with match chambers and shoot the most accurate ammunition. But match grade ammo is heavily lubed, and I find that this lube in cold weather often causes FSF. This happens with one of my guns, which is by no mean a match rifle; below 50 degrees Fahrenheit the first shot hits about an inch low if the barrel has cooled for more than 10 minutes. The various target disciplines allow you to warm up your barrel before shooting for score. But biathletes shoot in much colder weather and cannot shoot sighters or warmup shots, right? So how do you keep the first shot with the rest of the group? Do you use ammo with a special lube. I have read that Eley has all weather lube and makes a special round for biathlons. Like biathletes, small game hunters like myself cannot take warmup shots.
I would much appreciate your collective wisdom here.
Thanks,
541S