T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1132.1 | | DROMO::BULLARD | | Wed Jan 29 1992 14:37 | 27 |
| I hunt at varying altitudes here in Colorado and have never thought
about that factor. Since I hunt with a "flat shooting" rifle sighted
in dead zero at 250 yds, and probably would'nt shoot past that range
I don't think I need to worry about that. I have my trajectory table
memorized in case I do (only with a VERY steady position). I think a
greater concern would be uphill/downhill (not perpendicular to gravity)
would be a greater concern. Since high elevations usually have
mountains that would be more the thing to worry about. In practical
terms, always check your rifle for accuracy before hunting, especially
if it got handled by them baggage gorillas at the airports :^)
My 7mm Mag bullet compared to the Line of Sight would exit the barrel
about 1 1/2" below the LOS and climb (depending on scope center to
center of barrel dimension). At 25 yds it would cross the
LOS and continue to climb. Somewhere a little past 110 yds it would
reach its peak of 1.8" above LOS and begin dropping. At 250 yds it would
again pass through the line of sight as it continues to drop. After
that would I have a concern. The vitals on a deer are 9" zone, out
to 250 yds I dont worry about much...just aim and shoot (for the above
reasons). When sighting in a rifle the first time I always get it to
hit dead zero at 25 yds (conserve bullets and hassle). Then fine tune
to hit usually 1 1/2 high at 100 yds (usually it will be right on if
ya done the 25yds correctly). Then I know that anywhere between 0 to
250 yds is plus or minus 2 inches (or less)...more than enough for a
vital organ shot. I don't think air resistance high vs low altitude
would make any noticable difference.
chuck
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1132.2 | Info in G&A mid '91 issue | JUPITR::FERRARO | I'm the NRA | Wed Jan 29 1992 22:41 | 17 |
| Mike,
I'm not much on balistics but do remember reading an article
on just this subject.
It was in a Guns & Ammo magazine, probably Aug. '91 issue.
I'm still in the unpacking stages of moving, but if I find
it in reasonable time I'll bring it in and enter the finer
points as a reply.
I do remember there was some sort of calculations that could
help figure out where a bullet would hit at 10k ft if zero'ed
at sea level. Also, it was mentioned the best way was to
get to your spot early enough to re-zero. (no kidding)..
Greg
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1132.3 | | ODIXIE::RHARRIS | Ultralight forever | Thu Jan 30 1992 17:22 | 6 |
| I know that there is a definite difference in trajectory, as when the
PGA tour hits Colorado, instead of a 7 iron from the green at 170 yds,
it's a pitching wedge.
bob
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1132.4 | Golf club = GA deer hunting instrument?... | DECALP::HOHWY | Just another Programmer | Fri Jan 31 1992 04:11 | 10 |
| >> I know that there is a definite difference in trajectory, as when the
>> PGA tour hits Colorado, instead of a 7 iron from the green at 170 yds,
>> it's a pitching wedge.
bob, the real question is, of course, do they sight in when
they arrive? :-)
- Mike
|
1132.5 | Thinner air = much flatter shooting | SALEM::MACGREGOR | | Fri Feb 07 1992 14:50 | 11 |
| A few years back I went out west to Jackson Hole, Wy. and noticed a big
difference in point of impact between out there and here in N.H. Bullet
drop was much less at the higher altitude. I had my 30/06 zeroed for
about 225 yards here in N.H. and when I went out there it seemed like
my zero suddenly changed to about 275 yards. At first I thought it was
me. But when I tried my 300 Win Mag which I had zeroed at home for 250
yards, all of a sudden my zero seemed to be greater than 300 yards. The
city firing range in Jackson was over 6200 ft. in elevation. I believe
I posted a similar note in the firearms notesfile back around October
of 1988.
Bret
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