I don't usually post reviews on anything cuz no one on here really gives a schit but I am compelled to write about this little tool.
It was my first real chance to use it today and to say i was impressed is an understement. A second round hit at 1200m ( and then many, many sebsequent hits on a 15x15 piece of steel) is pretty good stuff. I hadn't done any load development whatsoever so I just threw something together that i thought might work. The rifle is my beloved 300 Lapua Magnum (or 30-338 Lapua ) if you like.
The load was Lapua Brass, 230 Berger hybrids, winchester magnum primers and 90 grains of VV N570.
I chronied them at 3060 fps at -11C. The ES was horrible at about 40fps but these were shoddily thrown together anyways. I grouped and zeroed at 200m suprisingly enough they were grouping around 1.0 to 1.3 inches at 200m. So armed with this MV data I put it all in the Applied Ballistics Kestrel. Wind was pretty much zero and the kestrel said i needed 3L(for spin drift) and 9.1 mils elevation. Dialed it on and held perfctly centered on the 15x15in square. First shot literally missed by an inch on the left edge of the tgt. ( I saw the snow fly off the tree branch ) Sent the second shot with a right edge hold and dinggggggggggg. Music to my ears. I took a rip down on the sled to fix the rope that broke and when i returned the conditions must have changed cuz now that lil kestrel was telling me to drop a click. Who am I to argue. I took the click off and fired dingggggggg. 2 inches away from the previous shot.
Having a tool that gives up to the second updates for long range shooting is invaluable in my opinion. Its very user friendly and battery life seems really good even in really cold weather. It costs a lot of money ($650) but if u really wanna nail those long range tgts without a spotter its your best chance!
It was my first real chance to use it today and to say i was impressed is an understement. A second round hit at 1200m ( and then many, many sebsequent hits on a 15x15 piece of steel) is pretty good stuff. I hadn't done any load development whatsoever so I just threw something together that i thought might work. The rifle is my beloved 300 Lapua Magnum (or 30-338 Lapua ) if you like.
The load was Lapua Brass, 230 Berger hybrids, winchester magnum primers and 90 grains of VV N570.
I chronied them at 3060 fps at -11C. The ES was horrible at about 40fps but these were shoddily thrown together anyways. I grouped and zeroed at 200m suprisingly enough they were grouping around 1.0 to 1.3 inches at 200m. So armed with this MV data I put it all in the Applied Ballistics Kestrel. Wind was pretty much zero and the kestrel said i needed 3L(for spin drift) and 9.1 mils elevation. Dialed it on and held perfctly centered on the 15x15in square. First shot literally missed by an inch on the left edge of the tgt. ( I saw the snow fly off the tree branch ) Sent the second shot with a right edge hold and dinggggggggggg. Music to my ears. I took a rip down on the sled to fix the rope that broke and when i returned the conditions must have changed cuz now that lil kestrel was telling me to drop a click. Who am I to argue. I took the click off and fired dingggggggg. 2 inches away from the previous shot.
Having a tool that gives up to the second updates for long range shooting is invaluable in my opinion. Its very user friendly and battery life seems really good even in really cold weather. It costs a lot of money ($650) but if u really wanna nail those long range tgts without a spotter its your best chance!