rgchristensen wrote on Sep 4
th, 2018 at 3:34pm:
Shooting groups and measuring "extreme spread" is statistically naive. One is then only considering 2 shots out of each group. It is much more informative to measure mean radius for each impact, which considers each shot. The information obtained is, moreover, more interesting to target shooters, who are concerned with how far each shot is from the center of the target.
CHRIS
RGChristensen
This is often said and always wrong.
MR and group size are easily interchangeable.
MEAN RADIUS
. The Mean Radius, (MR), of a group of shots is the mean or average distance of each shot from the center of the group.
Some contend that MR, is a "better" measure of accuracy than "Group Size", (GS), the distance between centers of the furthest-apart two shots in a group.
MR measurement is very difficult to make and understand; and has no detectable advantage over GS, except to lend an air of expertise to the advocate.
MR and GS both measure the same thing, accuracy, and thus are the same thing except for a little arithmetic. When you know GS, you know MR; and vice versa.
This table show the little bit of arithmetic required to change GS to MR, and vice versa,.
Shots per MR times this GS times this
group = GS = MR
2 1.93 0.52
3 2.40 0.42
4 2.67 0.37
5 2.87 0.35
6 3.02 0.33
7 3.14 0.32
8 3.24 0.31
9 3.32 0.30
10 3.40 0.29
Example: With 5 shot groups, multiply MR by 2.87 to get GS; multiply GS by .35 to get MR.
Get it?