g
Kombayotch, great posts especially about the angular lead. I was just about to research this subject and you saved me a whole bunch of time.
Just wondering, what software are you using to generate the graphs?
You wouldn't have any 6.5 Creedmoor brass you are going to sell?
Sorry Johnny, I haven't completely decided if I am going to switch to 6 Creedmoor or 6 SLR yet, so I'm holding onto my 6.5 Creedmoor brass for a while longer.
Since you guys like the info, let me give you some more.
We know that we don't like doing math under stress because its easy to make errors, so we try to minimize it and we make cards like this to carry in our wrist coach:
We black out the portions that are inaccurate to avoid errors and do simple divisions or multiplication by 2 if we want to use targets or mil values that are larger than what is in our table. If we really want to be fast, we replace the distance with the actual scope come-ups.
Well, as we know, ranging isn't the only thing we use our reticle for. We also use it for hold-overs, hole-unders, wind hold offs and leads on movers. But, we can also use our reticle to estimate the speed of a mover. To do this, we need to know the distance. If we know the distance, we can measure how many mils our mover moves over a given time. If we know the distance, and we know the number of mils it has moved, we can calculate the distance it moved. Because we did this over a specific time, we have distance over time, which is speed. Now, like with ranging, we don't want to calculate this on the fly. So, we make a little chart to put in our wrist coach:
We observe our target and see how many mils it crosses while we count "one steamboat, two steamboat' in our head. So, if we were at 625 yards, and our target moved 5 mils, it is going about 3 MPH. We interpolate between the values in the table for distance and mil movements in between our values. They are close, so it's easy to do.
Well, we know how many mils/MPH we need to hold from my earlier post, so we go a step further and put the mil leads directly into the table:
So now we observe our target see how many mils it crosses while we count "one steamboat, two steamboat' in our head. So, if we were at 625 yards, and our target moved 5 mils, we lead 1.6 mils.
Track holding 1.6 mils and fire! We've reduced our information down to something very fast and manageable that we can do in a match.
If a match director tells you that the target is moving at 2 MPH and it's moving at a 45 degree angle to your line of fire, you need to calculate the horizontal component. If you measure the target speed as above, it will give you the horizontal component directly.
Most of the time I have my magnification somewhere between 10-15x when dealing with movers. Even less when they're very close. But, that doesn't matter, I can always rely on my reticle because my scope is FFP.