What drove me nuts was that my groups seemed to consist of multiple flyers. This made my testing fairly useless other than to determine what velocity I could get from each load.
That is, for a three-shot group, say, I'd fire a shot, note its point of impact, fire a second shot, see it hit an inch or so to the right, then the third shot would go to the same POI as the first. Or, sometimes, the second. Five-shot groups were little better, consisting of a tight three-shot group and a tight two-shot group an inch or so apart.
I didn't feel that my shooting was off, and my shots with the Model 70 were more evenly distributed.
I am wondering if I should suspect either the bedding or the scope of the Mark X, or something else.
What would you check first? I found that a thickness of business card under the recoil lug effectively gives it a free-floated barrel. And, I have a spare scope I could put on it.
BTW, when it's that hot I will (from now on) always bring a third rifle, or a good book. It takes *forever* for a barrel to cool down under those conditions.
John
But, since there seemed to be quite a bit of forend pressure, I will try it with the business card shim under the lug as the poor man's free-float and see what happens.
I also cut a shim for the area under the tang, as it seemed that tightening the rear guard screw was sucking that down a bit sharply.
Further thoughts?