Bullet stability is not just a function of velocity and twist rate. Air density plays a major roll. Shooting at higher altitude (lower pressure), during storms (lower barometric pressure), higher temperature(higher molecultar velocity) and higher humidity (lower molecular wieght) all tend to reduce the spin rate needed to stabilize a bullet.
You may find that a rifle which shoots great in warm weather can be unstable in cold weather. There is an optimal spin rate for any atmosphere, bullet, range, and velocity, and stability is not perfect at any spin rate. However, accuracy falls off more rapidly by spining a bullet too slow than too fast.
Your observation of a 10" twist barrel shooting better than an 8" doesn't surprise me at all. It might be more apparent why if you described the entire situation including the muzzle velocity, range, temperature and altitude where you are shooting.
Consider that if you could shoot in a vacuum a 1 turn in 100" barrel would stabilize a 220 gn SMK. It would be just as accurate from a smoothbore, it just might not arrive point first.
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