All of my Savages shoot under 3/8" with the right load preparation. One is an accustocked .243 sporter. Make sure everything (scope rings, base) is tight and the barrel is free floating. With regards to load preparation, consistency is the key. I've been using a Lee Collet Die on three of my four Savages. I get excellent concentricity on the loaded rounds. Pay particular attention to your bullet seating depth. A .020" jump is a good, starting point with standard (tangent ogive) bullets, such as the Nosler BT's. Many of the Hornady's, such as the SST, A-Max, V-Max, BTHP Match, are secant ogive designs and **generally** shoot well seated touching the lands. But, make sure of your seating measurements and start at minimum loads, to check pressure, if you seat touching the lands. As for powder selection, I would start with powder in the faster half of the burning range. I know this goes against conventional wisdom, but, its been working for me, in regards to accuracy, lately. So, for the 95 bullet weight, I'd start with one of the 4895's, IMR4064, RL-15, Varget, H414, and one of the 4350's. Ideally, you'd try 3 or 4 of these. One should shoot better than the others. Then you start fine varying the charge, changing seating depth, etc.