Jesse Jaymes
WKR
If you're from the east coast, run a 243 semi and think the 6.5 will give you the ability to "poke" further.....please do the antelope a favor and limit your shots......
It was the 6.5 because I had worked up a handload for it and I was shooting factory ammo on the .243.What was the winner?
I'm from the east and have the same rifles to pick from. Going on my first antelope hunt this fall. I've never shot long distances in wind. 100 yards is a long shot here. How close are you saying to limit shots like 200?If you're from the east coast, run a 243 semi and think the 6.5 will give you the ability to "poke" further.....please do the antelope a favor and limit your shots......
I've been pretty cranky of late. Was more intended as a "WTF" Lots of 3 legged game around from people TRYING to POKE at shit. Not fair to the animal. I'm saying Know your Shit, how it works and where bullets impact at ranges beyond 100 yards. Know what 10 mph of full value wind feels like, and how it effects/affects impact.
If you're adding pressure to the trigger on an "I think about there".....you're wrong. It's a shitty feeling in your stomach.....to drive 2 days with your buddies on your first western experience to watch legs blow off at the knee and empty what rounds you have remaining watching an antelope hobble across the prairie that you'll never catch up with.
Do all you can to avoid that. If your limit is 100 yards due to limited practice distances and limited like environmentals, then get more sneaky.
Soooo many better LR shooters on here than me. But I do shoot and compete in LR steel shoots. After a few hundred yards, things get exponentially more difficult. A monkey can line up the crosshairs and slowly add pressure to a trigger. That's easy. Predicting the bullet drop is pretty easy. Wind pushing bullets at various angles to include lift and downdraft...makes things more challenging. And past 300 yards shit goes South very quickly....or can...to the undereducated or non practicing.
I am just getting into shooting longer ranges. In Missouri the longest shot that I needed to take where I deer hunted was 100 yards. Now I'm gearing up for an antelope hunt out west so I have been extending ranges. How much did you hold for windage with that kind of wind. I sending factory 180 grain Accubonds at 2788 fps. Theoretically, I should be holding about 24 inches. Does this sound right to you. I haven't shot in the wind yet to check how accurate the ballistics table is.I use a 200 grain eldx out of my 300wm at 3000fps. Don’t need it to kill a goat but the wind here in South Dakota can be rough. This goat( I know he’s a baby) was shot at 380 yards with a 15-25 mph gusty wind.
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I am just getting into shooting longer ranges. In Missouri the longest shot that I needed to take where I deer hunted was 100 yards. Now I'm gearing up for an antelope hunt out west so I have been extending ranges. How much did you hold for windage with that kind of wind. I sending factory 180 grain Accubonds at 2788 fps. Theoretically, I should be holding about 24 inches. Does this sound right to you. I haven't shot in the wind yet to check how accurate the ballistics table is.
Thank you for the advice. I can shoot safely 800 yards at my property. I normally hate to shoot on windy days but now you have me hoping this Saturday is windy.I’ve found the ballistic charts to be very close, if your measurements are accurate (your speed and the wind speed and direction). However, it takes the practice at the range on windy days to really see what you and your rifle do in those conditions. Find a range you can practice at distance and go when the wind is blowing, and see what happens.
Thank you for the advice. I can shoot safely 800 yards at my property. I normally hate to shoot on windy days but now you have me hoping this Saturday is windy.