Ok, I thought you meant the barrel was shorter. Reprofiling the barrel wouldn't have too much of an effect , in that case. Unless your sling is too tight, in which case you'd see some kind of stringing, in the direction the sling pulls the barrel. Just for giggles , try this: Do several strings, single load the rounds. Bolt hold open should work, just drop the round into the port, trip the bolt release , let the bolt drive the round into the chamber. Stay in position - don't tip the rifle- break each shot carefully. What this should determine , is if your group size will vary due to magazine pressure against the bolt, similar to what you get with an FAL. Single loading takes out one variable. Granted, the bolt lockup is different in the FAL, but the idea is to break this down to where you can examine one area at a time. As well, it can show you if it's the rifle, or something you are doing , that you may not realize. As well, shoot from the same position , if possible. Ensure you don't rest the barrel itself against anything , as disturbing the harmonic of the barrel any more than you already have (reprofiling) will disperse your shots more. Take your time, break your shots clean, focus on your front sight post, and follow through. Blazing thru a magazine is fine for a function check of the mag, but gains little beyond knowing the extreme spread of your group in rapid fire. To determine the inherrent accuracy of your particular rifle, start with one load, and go thru all the above steps, beginning with the single loading. It's more challenging with iron sights, but the test of the marksman is his skill with whatever equipment is laid before him. The basics of sight alignment , position, trigger control , and breathing - apply to whatever weapon you pick up. Look for Jim Owens book, "Sight Alignment, Trigger Control , and the "Big Lie" ", JAFEICA Publishing, Milwaukee, WI - for whatever details I glossed over , here. Some other reading you can look into is Precision Shooting Magazine , or write a note to Peter Kokalis, at Shotgun News, or at SOF Magazine, where he was the technical editor for evaluating firearms. Small Arms Review also does articles on things we enjoy, maybe take a look at their website. Shooting at 20 degrees isn't so bad, it's just harder to focus on what you are doing. Try to slow down a bit, break the shot with more care. Have you done an Appleseed Shoot with your rifle yet? They typically work at 100 yards, so it's just challenging enough , yet not so bad it's discouraging. They also have experienced shooters to coach you, and spot what may be an unnoticed habit in what you are doing. If it's not a loose pin in the sights , it might just be a loose nut behind the buttplate. Briefly, a recap: *One type of ammo ( load or bullet weight) *Single load thru the ejection port *Stay in position, consistently *Breathing *Natural point of aim *Sight alignment *Focus on front sight ( yes the target IS blurry- it's OK) *Pressss the trigger smoothly *Follow through, reacquire sights *Repeat Measure group size, see how it works out for you. Curious: you shot bolt actions before this? What distance are you shooting at , presently? Does the rifle group better warm , or hot? ( barrel may be "walking" ) What rate of twist is your barrel?