the spank
CGN Ultra frequent flyer
- Location
- Planet Earth Wearing My Tinfoil Hat
I understand the concept of trajectory in how your line of sight is above the bore and the sights are adjusted so as to "lob" the bullet to the point of aim in where it crosses the line of sight. My question er problem is compounded in that the rifle I inherited from my Grandfather a decade or so ago is top eject and has a side mounted scope on it. So not only do I have a sight above the bore I have one to the left of the bore. As I understand it once I have set my sights at a given distance my bullet has to cross the line of sight at the distance I have sighted in for? Now I am told that if lets say the bullet is coming from the bore to the sight on the left it crosses over at my zero point and then continues on in the direction of travel it crossed my line of sight from. So if it comes from the right to the left it continues left after the zero point has been crossed. Is there a chart of any kind that can help me determine where on the flight path the bullet is in relation to my sights or bore before and after the zero point? Measuring to the centre of the scope is easy enough to determine for the side trajectory.
For those wondering the rifle is a Model 71 Winchester .348 and I am shooting factory 200 grain silvertips. I have the rifle sighted in 3" high at 100 for a dead zero at 200. I know you are thinking well how far can he be shooting with that to worry about the crossover but I took a Whitetail with the rifle in 2009 at 338 yards. Heightwise I had my holdover figured pretty well and hit the deer dead centre height but the side crossover (windage?) was something I had not considered and I hit the deer about 10" to the left of where I was holding and plugged him a bit far back. He went down after about 25 yards running but after I got to him I was surprised to see how far back I had placed the shot. I heard but could not see the hit through the fixed 4X scope that was on the rifle. I replaced the scope about a month ago with a 3-9 Redfield and have yet to sight it in, heck I haven't even shot the rifle since the day I took the deer with it but I picked up a bunch of ammo and joined a club here with 100, 200 and 300 metre ranges and am anxious to get out, get sighted in and burn a bit of ammo.
For those wondering the rifle is a Model 71 Winchester .348 and I am shooting factory 200 grain silvertips. I have the rifle sighted in 3" high at 100 for a dead zero at 200. I know you are thinking well how far can he be shooting with that to worry about the crossover but I took a Whitetail with the rifle in 2009 at 338 yards. Heightwise I had my holdover figured pretty well and hit the deer dead centre height but the side crossover (windage?) was something I had not considered and I hit the deer about 10" to the left of where I was holding and plugged him a bit far back. He went down after about 25 yards running but after I got to him I was surprised to see how far back I had placed the shot. I heard but could not see the hit through the fixed 4X scope that was on the rifle. I replaced the scope about a month ago with a 3-9 Redfield and have yet to sight it in, heck I haven't even shot the rifle since the day I took the deer with it but I picked up a bunch of ammo and joined a club here with 100, 200 and 300 metre ranges and am anxious to get out, get sighted in and burn a bit of ammo.




















































