1:7 1:8 twist, which one for 3 gun?

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Simple answer for a simple question: no. You'll find a lot of 18 and 20" barrels to be 1/8 twist. Most 16" barrels are 1/7 or 1/9. In this game, it really doesn't matter. We're not bullseye shooting, it's about having reliable firearms and getting rounds on target the fastest. Steel doesn't know the difference in twist rates.
 
dennishoddy said:
My hunting AR's use the 1-7 for heavier bullets.
How heavy? My 1:8 have shot 69's like a beast. I don't have as good of luck with 77gr Hornady but I don't know if that's the load or the bullet in conjunction with the twist.
 
Barnes 70 grain TSX is what I've been using, and it really works well. I haven't tried the 77 grain Hornady yet, although I do have a partial box of the projectiles at home that were given to me. He couldn't get a group with his 1-9. Wants me to try them in 1-7.
 
Like RigPig said: No.
Back when I used to shoot a little high-power rifle I believe that the conventional wisdom was that anything slower than 1:7 would be good for 69gr or lighter. 1:7 was good up to 80gr. I understand that some guys are using 1:6.5 for bullets heavier than 80gr.
 
1-7 was designed to use a 77gr bullet being as it was developed for the Special Purpose Rifle for Naval Special Warfare in conjunction with the Mk262 round.

A 1-7 barrel will eat just about what ever you throw at it but as stated earlier it truly shine in the 69-80 gr range (one hole groups is my understanding).
 
No it wasn't. 1-7 was chosen to use the M856 tracer when the M16A2 was adopted in 1983, way before MK262 made made it onto the scene.

1-8 is my favorite, but 1-7 is fine. There's not really a good reason to have a barrel slower than that other than it was really cheap.
 
Josh Beauchamp said:
1-7 was designed to use a 77gr bullet being as it was developed for the Special Purpose Rifle for Naval Special Warfare in conjunction with the Mk262 round.

A 1-7 barrel will eat just about what ever you throw at it but as stated earlier it truly shine in the 69-80 gr range (one hole groups is my understanding).
It would still depend on the barrel. Just having the "ideal" twist rate for a given bullet weight won't get you automatic one hole groups. A poor quality 1x7 barrel will still group worse than a high quality one.
 
Matt Rigsby said:
If you pull the trigger harder your accuracy problems will solve themselves.
I think this technique also works for pistol and shotgun, especially for knock down steel.
 
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