GoosePilot
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Feb 3, 2018
- Messages
- 403
So i feel pretty confident with my hunting setups in fairly nice conditions to 600-800 yards on game. Custom 6cm and 7 blaser with z5 scopes fitted with 2 turn moa turrets. Both guns more than capable of .5 moa to 1k. Use an older gunwerks br2 for solutions.
Yesterday I was at a fun shoot at a ranch 200-1200yd steel among other courses. It was blowing 25-40 mph and shooting against some pretty skilled and experienced guys. Some of them 600 yd competitors, gunsmith/competitors, and just experienced coyote hunters/ranchers.
I realized I have a bunch to learn yet lol. My z5s aren't really windage dialing scopes, nor do they have reticle to hold very much wind compared to competition type scopes.
I did recently purchase a x5 5-25 to put on an old Texas custom bench 22-250. I have not set up to reload for this gun yet so I'm just shooting hornady 55 vmax ammo. Again in fairly mild conditions it shoots fairly well out to 1k, but in wind it's really falling off compared to the 105 or 195 bergers in my hunting guns.
I purchased a kestrel 5700 elite and lightly used it on 3 outings now with 4 different guns. Not too hard to get elevations to 1200 yards dialed in but wind is another animal.
Each of the best guys Yesterday use the kestrel differently and I would say fairly minimally as far as what a kestrel is capable of. I would say they are more educated Kentucky windage style haha.
I feel like I should have shot better personally than I did even with the winds we had. I also feel like I'm kinda jumping into the middle of the precision long range pool fundamentally.
How do you expert shooters set up and use this "system" for long range competitions? How similarly or differently do you setup for hunting?
I'm have no desire to pack a 3lb big knob scope around for hunting, but I would like to get a little more serious on a setup or 2 for bench shooting.
What's the best way to learn the fundamentals and build a solid longer range shooting/competition skillset?
Should I buy a big scope(s) and swap hunting scopes out for days on the range? Leave hunting setups alone and build better bench setups? Like maybe turn 22-250 into 6 br, dasher, gt? Stay with moa or go to mil to maybe one day actually compete at some 600 or 1k or more events?
Yesterday I was at a fun shoot at a ranch 200-1200yd steel among other courses. It was blowing 25-40 mph and shooting against some pretty skilled and experienced guys. Some of them 600 yd competitors, gunsmith/competitors, and just experienced coyote hunters/ranchers.
I realized I have a bunch to learn yet lol. My z5s aren't really windage dialing scopes, nor do they have reticle to hold very much wind compared to competition type scopes.
I did recently purchase a x5 5-25 to put on an old Texas custom bench 22-250. I have not set up to reload for this gun yet so I'm just shooting hornady 55 vmax ammo. Again in fairly mild conditions it shoots fairly well out to 1k, but in wind it's really falling off compared to the 105 or 195 bergers in my hunting guns.
I purchased a kestrel 5700 elite and lightly used it on 3 outings now with 4 different guns. Not too hard to get elevations to 1200 yards dialed in but wind is another animal.
Each of the best guys Yesterday use the kestrel differently and I would say fairly minimally as far as what a kestrel is capable of. I would say they are more educated Kentucky windage style haha.
I feel like I should have shot better personally than I did even with the winds we had. I also feel like I'm kinda jumping into the middle of the precision long range pool fundamentally.
How do you expert shooters set up and use this "system" for long range competitions? How similarly or differently do you setup for hunting?
I'm have no desire to pack a 3lb big knob scope around for hunting, but I would like to get a little more serious on a setup or 2 for bench shooting.
What's the best way to learn the fundamentals and build a solid longer range shooting/competition skillset?
Should I buy a big scope(s) and swap hunting scopes out for days on the range? Leave hunting setups alone and build better bench setups? Like maybe turn 22-250 into 6 br, dasher, gt? Stay with moa or go to mil to maybe one day actually compete at some 600 or 1k or more events?