You guys can all make your assumptions and draw your own conclusions.
I know what I know and I've seen what I've seen.
You want to blame my incompetence and compliment the guy who outshot me and attribute the difference purely to skill.
You want to paint me as petty and a poor looser.
I get it, I hear you and you 100% are wrong.
If the dope was good yesterday and is crap today then your shooting today is crap, its as simple as that. You can try to compensate and adjust but you are just playing catch up.
All I'm saying is the Kestrel adjusts for all that and it makes a difference. Its a small difference from your keyboard on the internet but miss a plate by 1/2 inch at 240 yards and its a miss.
I really don't give a rats butt if I win any match these days... I have no wall space for the awards I already have. And if guys out shoot me, that's great and I applaud that as much as anyone, but when the bullets are not going where you think they should be going... you have to figure out why. In the end it's the drop data... it was right on Thursday and wrong at times on Saturday....
but the Kestrel was right all day on both days.... go figure.
Guys, I've got a background in Aerospace Engineering, I'm also a software developer I do quite a bit of work with involute curve calculations and non linear regression and I do scientific research and experimental development for a living. I study data every darn day. The kestrel has more intelligence in the software that uses atmospheric sensors to compensate in real time... people are not that sensitive... people when rushed are not that smart... nobody is... people get distracted... the devise doesn't... it has one purpose and it does most of it better than anyone can, that's all I'm saying.
The wind is the wildcard, but the drops are solid.
You are talking about shooting .22LR right? And expecting to score on target, whatever that target may be, at distances out to 200 or more yards?