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Hunting
The Basics, Starting Out
What to expect with POI changes with change in geographical locations/ altitude.
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<blockquote data-quote="dfanonymous" data-source="post: 1327470" data-attributes="member: 97050"><p>I really think the only benefit to a 200y zero is having a further PBR. Really only applies for hunters that dont shoot using turrets I reckon.</p><p></p><p>To be fair, i know you know you wont be losing much in terms of dope. You said you were shooting out to 500 and for a 7mm mag its probably something like .9 mils of hold or around there. So think of it as a fresh start. Zero, then shoot 200, miss, correct, shoot, hit, wright results in data book, move to 300, shoot, miss and so on. Wright down that DA for when you are shooting, light conditions/mirrage, relevant wind and W direction and go home. Then throw the data into your ballistic software and see if it aligns...and it wont. then tweak the MV and BC until the data matches what you wrote down on your electronic solver.</p><p>Easy day.</p><p>Then comes the wind.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dfanonymous, post: 1327470, member: 97050"] I really think the only benefit to a 200y zero is having a further PBR. Really only applies for hunters that dont shoot using turrets I reckon. To be fair, i know you know you wont be losing much in terms of dope. You said you were shooting out to 500 and for a 7mm mag its probably something like .9 mils of hold or around there. So think of it as a fresh start. Zero, then shoot 200, miss, correct, shoot, hit, wright results in data book, move to 300, shoot, miss and so on. Wright down that DA for when you are shooting, light conditions/mirrage, relevant wind and W direction and go home. Then throw the data into your ballistic software and see if it aligns...and it wont. then tweak the MV and BC until the data matches what you wrote down on your electronic solver. Easy day. Then comes the wind. [/QUOTE]
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The Basics, Starting Out
What to expect with POI changes with change in geographical locations/ altitude.
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