- Location
- Somewhere on the Hudson Bay Coast
A few observations:
Near wind is a greater concern to the long range marksman than far wind.
Provided you are sighted in and shooting at a similar elevation, atmospheric pressure variations will not take you off paper.
Use your computer generated drop tables as a guide line, not as gospel, create data pertinent to your loads in your rifle, by actual shooting in 100 yard increments, then once you have a basic table worked out, you can add to it by shooting at 100 yard increments beginning at 50 yards or 25 yards.
Calculating the drop at 1000 from feet or inches will make your head hurt. I've found it simpler to use come-ups from a 100 yard zero in full minutes rather than clicks, thus if I needed to have a bullet impact 24" high at 100 to be on at 1000, I just need to add 24 minutes, and worry about the quarter minute adjustment to fine tune the POI. Your ammo might not be accurate enough to take a quarter minute into account.
Ensure that your scope is tracking properly (accurately and repeatedly) particularly near the limits of the adjustment.
Near wind is a greater concern to the long range marksman than far wind.
Provided you are sighted in and shooting at a similar elevation, atmospheric pressure variations will not take you off paper.
Use your computer generated drop tables as a guide line, not as gospel, create data pertinent to your loads in your rifle, by actual shooting in 100 yard increments, then once you have a basic table worked out, you can add to it by shooting at 100 yard increments beginning at 50 yards or 25 yards.
Calculating the drop at 1000 from feet or inches will make your head hurt. I've found it simpler to use come-ups from a 100 yard zero in full minutes rather than clicks, thus if I needed to have a bullet impact 24" high at 100 to be on at 1000, I just need to add 24 minutes, and worry about the quarter minute adjustment to fine tune the POI. Your ammo might not be accurate enough to take a quarter minute into account.
Ensure that your scope is tracking properly (accurately and repeatedly) particularly near the limits of the adjustment.