I knew the topic of a range finder would have to come up.
What about those scopes that are both range finder and scope? Are they just a gimmic or are they worth looking at?
Don,
Can you make turrets for a NF 5.5x22x50...
The advantage is that for 80% - 90% of the shots we encounter, we can just dial and shoot if our turret is within about 3000' of where we are hunting. That window can be smaller or larger depending on your loads performance. With a few simple "rule of thumb" formulas we can cover the other shots very reliably.
With 2 turrets you can cover a lot of North American hunts and you can be sheep hunting at 10,000' in the morning and in less than a minute put your second turret on and be dead on for a 3000' antelope hunt.
Picked up the Clearidge scope from the mail yesterday. Came with a 3" sun shade.What about Clearidge Optics?
I just ordered one for my son. Got the 30mm tube version Ultra XP5 2.5-12.5x42 mil dot for under $600.
They have the Ultra XP version with 1 inch tube for about $370
Carn't tell you how good it is yet as it has not yet arrived but from all reports they sound quite good. If it turns out to be no good then you will hear about it!!!!!
Since I hunt with, and spend a good portion of my day laser etching custom turrets, you can guess that I feel they are a great LRH tool.
That said, MontanaRifleman's point that a single turret can't match every situation is valid. Regardless of what system you use, you need to know what your bullet will be doing in the particular shot situation. If we find ourselves in a situation where an extreme elevation, temp, or angle means the turret won't be correct, we adjust accordingly. Adding a minute or taking a minute off with our turret is just as easy as it is with any turret.
The advantage is that for 80% - 90% of the shots we encounter, we can just dial and shoot if our turret is within about 3000' of where we are hunting. That window can be smaller or larger depending on your loads performance. With a few simple "rule of thumb" formulas we can cover the other shots very reliably.
With 2 turrets you can cover a lot of North American hunts and you can be sheep hunting at 10,000' in the morning and in less than a minute put your second turret on and be dead on for a 3000' antelope hunt. We hunt WY, CO, & NM for the bulk of our hunts which generally takes us from 4,000' to 11,000' and we use a 7,000' dial for about everything in the west..
Second turret is free for LRH members this month and you always get a click or MOA (special request) dial with the scope that works great for load developement.
So what you are saying is if I had a turret set for X rifle with X load at 7,000 feet, it would be good from 4,000 feet to 10,000 feet due to the aforementioned 3000' range? Do I have that correct?
Sorry guys - totally new to all of this so I may be asking some rather simple questions that most of you understand already.
...In my 300 WSM, I can get about 3200 fps with RL 17 and 180 E-Tips (BC of .523)...
I'm still trying to figure out how this is possible!
Super hot load I imagine, I guess you shoot virgin brass everytime, LOL!
-X3M