Agreed. A drop chart is ESSENTIAL out past 250-300 yards for small targets like gophers. A rangefinder is super handy to have too, although I'd still recommend taking the time and learning to use a mil-dot range-finding reticle - as you learn and use it, you also get better at visually judging ranges unassisted.
A neat item I saw on the forums here somewhere is a little drop chart that fits in those flip-up lens covers
A neat item I saw on the forums here somewhere is a little drop chart that fits in those flip-up lens covers
todbartell said:oh, and on the topic of using a Ballistic Plex for the 223, I'd just get a elevation turret put on your scope (Leupold does it on their scopes for $100), and just click the MOA up, hold dead on, out to as far as you want. just need to know the MOA drop from your zero...its really quite simple.
the Burris BP worked great for me on my 223, and now I have the Leupold Long range duplex on the rifle. Equally as good, and combined with a turret, makes hits out to 350 yards easy, and past that, pretty fun.
Get a good rangefinder, a turret, and a drop chart. Holdover is a thing of the pastWind is still the enemy of the 223 though...