In his videos, expecially the external ballistics ones, he makes a lot of references to the FM23-10.
I am taking notes as i am watching, here is an example.
Humidity Corrections
FM23-10 : When humidity goes up, impact goes down. When humidity goes down, impact goes up. Each 20% of change in humidity should be corrected by 1MOA
Rex : Water Vapor is less dense than air. The opposite of FM23-10, when very humid your bullet has less resistance. Under 1000 meters he does not factor in humidity. In the example he is showing a .308 168gr bullet being affected by only 0.3MOA@1000M. He is also refering to Sierra handloading book for humidity corrections.
So yeah, from someone new to it, he can ''seem'' instructed on the matter, but i do not take anything on youtube at 100% face value, i have my doubts there is more to it.
Most of this series has just disappeared off YouTube!!
Aaaahhhh!
Did anyone make backups? I managed to get through only the first 40 or so :-(
Quite frankly, the fact that his videos have disappeared is a huge service to the precision rifle community.
Quite frankly, the fact that his videos have disappeared is a huge service to the precision rifle community.
Can you point me to better resources?
As an engineer and scientist I found Rex's explanations technically accurate, while explained in simple language anyone can follow.
Of course I'm new to long range shooting so I have no idea where his advice is off.
His whole youtube channel:
https://archive.org/download/TiborasaurusRex_Archive/TiborasaurusRex/
Just sniper series:
https://archive.org/details/TyrantlizardkingSNIPER101
https://archive.org/details/TyrantLizardKingSNIPER102
Quite frankly, the fact that his videos have disappeared is a huge service to the precision rifle community.
Can you point me to better resources?
As an engineer and scientist I found Rex's explanations technically accurate, while explained in simple language anyone can follow.
Of course I'm new to long range shooting so I have no idea where his advice is off.
Can you point me to better resources?
As an engineer and scientist I found Rex's explanations technically accurate, while explained in simple language anyone can follow.
Of course I'm new to long range shooting so I have no idea where his advice is off.
The knock I've heard against Rex is that he is self taught, as opposed to having super cool sf sniper training to use to sell his ideas. I can see how some might not appreciate that, but I've not seen many point out where exactly he is wrong about something.