The Firing Line Forums

Go Back   The Firing Line Forums > Hogan's Alley > Handguns: General Handgun Forum

Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old September 3, 2020, 11:31 PM   #26
JohnKSa
Staff
 
Join Date: February 12, 2001
Location: DFW Area
Posts: 24,967
It's Minute Of Angle. Settled that one!
__________________
Do you know about the TEXAS State Rifle Association?
JohnKSa is offline  
Old September 4, 2020, 08:43 AM   #27
buck460XVR
Senior Member
 
Join Date: December 28, 2006
Posts: 4,342
Quote:
Originally Posted by JohnKSa View Post
It's Minute Of Angle. Settled that one!
....but does that relate to accuracy or precision?

Most gun folks know what MOA is. Most relate it to a group size of 1" or less at 100 yards. Quite simple really, but there's always that one or two persons that has to complicate the whole deal with theorems and the chastising of calling it "accuracy" instead of "precision". I was making a joke relative to this. Thanks for being so "accurate".


....or was it being "precise"?
buck460XVR is offline  
Old September 4, 2020, 10:57 PM   #28
JohnKSa
Staff
 
Join Date: February 12, 2001
Location: DFW Area
Posts: 24,967
Yes, I realized it was humor and tried to respond in kind. It's difficult to get that kind of thing across sometimes.

MOA is a unit of measure that can be used to measure EITHER accuracy or precision, however either one is defined.
__________________
Do you know about the TEXAS State Rifle Association?
JohnKSa is offline  
Old September 6, 2020, 04:02 PM   #29
imp
Senior Member
 
Join Date: November 11, 2006
Posts: 626
I want to piggyback off COSteve's distinction between mechanical accuracy and practical accuracy.

A rifle capable of 1 MOA accuracy, shot by a shooter capable of holding 1 MOA accuracy will still put bullets outside of that 1" target occasionally, because the errant factors between the shooter and his equipment are multiplied by each other.

I remember zeroing a scope recently, and fretting over the fine tuning, as the group got smaller, each shot had to be critiqued more minutely as to whether its location on the target was due to the shooter or the equipment.

With a handgun, this effect is much greater. Closer range, larger diameter bullets, cruder sights, and the effectiveness of the shooter are more difficult to diagnose correctly. Even when all the fundamentals are there, a bullet might land an inch left of the point of aim at 25 yards, and its difficult to determine the reason. Most handun sights are not capable of being minutely adjusted to allow a great shooter of truly exploiting the mechanical accuracy, which then hiders the practical accuracy, as there is difficultly in determining the mechanical accuracy and its ergonomic relationship with the shooter.
imp is offline  
Old September 6, 2020, 04:36 PM   #30
TXAZ
Senior Member
 
Join Date: September 5, 2010
Location: McMurdo Sound Texas
Posts: 4,322
https://blog.forecast.it/hs-fs/hubfs...-precision.jpg

Accuracy vs. Precision:

Precision is the size of the group without regard to the aim point, AKA Repeatability.

Accuracy is (in simple terms) the |sum of the distance| of each shot from the aim point.

They are different. MOA, when shooting at a target (like a deer), is the latter, not the former. (i.e.; Having all 5 shot hit within 0.1 inch from each other, but 100 yards from the deer is a worthless result and somewhat meaningless when the target ran away)
__________________

Cave illos in guns et backhoes
TXAZ is offline  
Old September 6, 2020, 05:11 PM   #31
JohnKSa
Staff
 
Join Date: February 12, 2001
Location: DFW Area
Posts: 24,967
MOA can be used to measure either the group size OR the distance of the point of impact from the point of aim.

MOA is simply a measure of angular distance and can be used to measure any angular distance desired, whether it's the distance between the two shots farthest apart in a group, the distance between the point of impact and the point of aim, or the angular distance between two stars in the night sky.
__________________
Do you know about the TEXAS State Rifle Association?
JohnKSa is offline  
Old September 6, 2020, 10:53 PM   #32
Aguila Blanca
Staff
 
Join Date: September 25, 2008
Location: CONUS
Posts: 18,457
Quote:
Originally Posted by TXAZ
Accuracy vs. Precision:

Precision is the size of the group without regard to the aim point, AKA Repeatability.

Accuracy is (in simple terms) the |sum of the distance| of each shot from the aim point.

They are different. MOA, when shooting at a target (like a deer), is the latter, not the former. (i.e.; Having all 5 shot hit within 0.1 inch from each other, but 100 yards from the deer is a worthless result and somewhat meaningless when the target ran away)
I agree with your definitions of precision v. accuracy.

I disagree that MOA refers to the latter. When we (at least, most shooters of my acquaintance) talk about a rifle that's capable of 1 MOA or 1/2 MOA, they are referring to the size of the groups that rifle will produce, not where the group falls relative to point-of-aim. If the rifle is capable of consistent groups (which is "precision"), accuracy is then a question of sight regulation ... and shooter. Neither of those affects the MOA precision of the firearm.

Using your example of shooting at a deer: If you shoot at a deer with a sub-MOA rifle and miss -- that doesn't mean the rifle was suddenly not capable of sub-MOA "precision," it means you missed.
__________________
NRA Life Member / Certified Instructor
NRA Chief RSO / CMP RSO
1911 Certified Armorer
Jeepaholic
Aguila Blanca is offline  
Old September 7, 2020, 07:26 AM   #33
ghbucky
Senior Member
 
Join Date: June 12, 2020
Posts: 1,177
Quote:
I hadn’t heard of measuring handgun accuracy in MOA, vs a “x” group at Y yards.

Has anyone else?
_________________
No, because most of us pure hand gunners don't know what MOA even means and just give a blank stare when someone wants to talk to us about MOA
ghbucky is offline  
Reply

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 11:37 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
This site and contents, including all posts, Copyright © 1998-2021 S.W.A.T. Magazine
Copyright Complaints: Please direct DMCA Takedown Notices to the registered agent: thefiringline.com
Page generated in 0.05211 seconds with 10 queries