Let me see if I can translate my thoughts about this comment I made clearly so that you can explain a little more in detail how this is not accurate...I need to see clearly where I am thinking mistakenly and correct this in order to progress with this testing.
(I am referring to charts & graphs from Al's Varmint Page...[ http://www.varmintal.com/a22lr.htm ])
First, consider a 'fixed barrel' and the vertical distance between two shots @ 50 yds. ... with a 40 fps ES.
*_This is what we are basically asking the tuner to 'tune out'...or 'lessen', to 'make less spread in the POI'. Given these numbers, these two rounds are stacked side by side 'vertically'. Not much difference but it is a 'string'. All the other shots that are close or the same will fall in between this ES.
One of the problems with this number is that it comes from calculations using a fixed barrel that does not move...this is unobtainable in the real world.
Another problem is that each velocity within that ES generates more or less barrel vibrations, this in turn generates a different barrel angle when the round leaves the muzzle. The result of this will give us a little wider spread in the 50 yd. POI. That is vertical stringing and the amplitude is now variable but magnified over the theoretical 'fixed barrel'.
These numbers (from Al's page) so far are considering the barrel moving through space in an 'up/down' direction but...in the same direction.
In my mind I can see that distance of movement in a barrel quantified as 'X'.
*_We are going to ask the tuner to minimize 'X' by slowing down the average of all the barrel angles generated and to close this string somewhat. This is what we want.
On the other hand...my thinking is that by picking a set of 2 shot groups (several in a row with only the .001" barrel weight-increase) that clearly indicate that the barrel is changing direction in it's 'up/down' swing...then I think we cut the quantified 'X' by as much as 1/2.
This is what I think I can see in this string of 2-shot groups here..."imagine where the barrel was pointing when the round left the muzzle...then trace a line between them and they indicate that the movement of the barrel was primarily 'side to side' across the horizontal plane much more so than it's movement in the vertical plane."
I know wind & shooter have responsibility in the shot placement also but I have carefully chosen to shoot when the wind was shifting from it's 'cool night time' flow from the mountains behind me to the wind coming back in reverse from the valley below (the valley warms in the morning sun and heats up and that warmer air starts to move back up). During that hour or so in the morning the wind can be absolutely still yet can still move some & move in all directions as the change is happening...this morning it was no more that 1.3 mph (according to my now calibrated flags and the Caldwell meter I just received.)
I took my time to minimize the wind and my part of the distribution of these test shots. This I will do in further testing as I examine further what these 2-shot groups will look like in 5-shot multiple groupings. That's the best I can do to make this testing as accurate as possible.
If you examine the rest of the 2-shot groups on this first test of a .025" barrel-weight increase, I think you will agree that the barrel is pointing in direction(s) other than straight up and down as all the Computer Generated Numbers on Al's Varmint Page suggests.
I think we are seeing barrel movement(s) that suggest the barrel is actually moving in some circular fashion, I'm not saying 'symmetrically circular' but some kind of 'irregular looking oval'. I think that the torque of the barrel as the round is engraving & accelerating creates the horizontal component of the barrels total movement...
If true, this is pointing out that there is a horizontal component to consider when choosing a 2-shot group to further prove by 5-shots multiple groups.
This is why I chose what looks like the bottom side of that movement so that I could reduce the vertical component, hopefully....by as much as 1/2 -X.
Again...if true...that reduction will lessen to a greater extent the vertical & horizontal distribution of the ES when the tuner is tuned.
NOTE...This is the first .025" of adjustment of a total range of .500" and it is on the short end of the barrel 'weight-length' to start out.
I chose to start at the minimum because...as the barrel weight-length increases, it has less of an effect on total possible movement of the barrel.
The longer the barrel weight-length is...the more influence that weight will have on maximum variations of movement.