I've had the same experience shooting high power matches in the rain. Never a significant difference. From .223 at 600 yards, or a 6.5-284 or .308 at 1000. The rain never played a big impact on poi. Certainly hard to believe a 2' difference at 100 yards. I've never seen anything close to that at even 1000 yards.I haven't seen any significant changes in impact when raining in competitions or just playing around out to 1000 yards on steel targets. Granted it was not a torrential downpour, but it was a steady rain. Just my experience.....
For as the tape on the muzzle; I plan on doing my own testing on that performance, just haven't got a round tuit yet.
Listen to this guy, LVJ76The fact that the bullet drops when it's pouring down does not mean accuracy falls appart.
For example again when shooting Silhouette a little rain does not matter but during matches in the summer during monsoon season as we call it down here where it pours down hard bullet impact will drop between 4 and 6" at 500m, but knowing this we adjust the scope 5 clicks up and done. During The Nationals in Raton New Mexico a few year ago the sky was falling down hard and sideways due to the wind, to the point we could barely see the rams at 500m, still knocked down 8 out of 10 and the bullets impacted where I pulled the trigger, made the adjustments to the scope before the set started and I was good to go.
Knowing your rifle, scope and ballistics is what matters in situations like this and especially out in the field where an animals life comes in to play.
Listen to this guy, LVJ76
I am new to long distance but did shoot 15 rounds kind of F class style at 600 yards and midway thru 15 rounds the rain came down and I think the wind changed with it. I took some pictures and the circled in red were shot during a significant rain.
That's 600 yards dude....let's see your 600 yard groupings...Please don't take this the wrong way...but based on the target and previous shots, I'm not sure your load is capable of showing much of anything based on environmental changes.Not much accuracy or precision going on there. Not being disrespectful.
I knew beluebows comment would start this---saw it comingThat's 600 yards dude....let's see your 600 yard groupings...
That's 600 yards dude....let's see your 600 yard groupings...
if that is an official MR-1 600 yard NRA target then the X ring alone is 6" in diameter
but if its an MR-1FC target then the 10 ring is only 3"
That's 600 yards dude....let's see your 600 yard groupings...
I did mis -speak-- I meant 3" X ring not 10 ringThat's not correct. MR-1FC target has a 6" 10 ring, and a 3" x ring. FC targets are based around a 1 MOA 10 ring. Sling targets have a 2 MOA 10 ring.