WeiserBucks
WKR
Go shoot that setup at 600 without dialing and post the results.
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You do not have to hold over at 350, the bullet will in fact be in the vitals.Even within this idea, the 300 yard zero doesn't make sense. With a 100 yard zero, aiming high lungs is in the vitals to 300 anyway even without dialing or holding over.
You still have to hold over at 350+ so why worry about holding under from 0-300 (where probably 90% of your shots will be) just to save .5 mil at 450?
After having spent a few weeks with a SWFA 6x MQ Gen2, I can say that Quick Drop on a 6.5 Creedmoor turns it effectively into a BDC reticle. MPBR isn't a big issue -- after 200 yards or so I'm setting up a position, and the reticle is good to about 500 yards at 6x.2. Reliably using a good Mil reticle to, in practice, push those limits further. Potentially out to 650 yards.
That’s the plan!Go shoot that setup at 600 without dialing and post the results.
That actually makes a ton of sense.It's not faster and simpler though. Maybe if you're holding exactly on 0.5 or 1.5 but most holds you're going spend just as much time trying to figure out where to hold with your imprecise aiming point as you would to put a few clicks in the scope. Simpler is holding the crosshairs in the middle where you want to hit.
Further, the diamonds in the mil-quad are 0.2 mil tall by 0.4 mil wide thick. That's roughly 4.7" tall and 9.4" wide @ 650 yards. Not exactly a precise aiming point.
No, as long as it’s a light to moderate wind, old school theoretically would work. A 5 mph wind would be 10 inches. Hold edge of the vitals into the wind.How do you plan to handle wind? Hold and hope?
I'd be skeptical too. You ought to make it a "no rangefinders allowed" challenge while you're at it at unknown ranges.I really would like to see the “no dial cold bore challenge”. No practice, no dialing, from a field position, on a 10” plate at a called 400+ yd maximum effective range, and, because almost everyone who does so says they use mpbr because dialing is slow—maybe even on a time limit. I tried and discovered I couldnt do it to my own satisfaction, Im genuinely curious what folks can reliably do using this method. I have to say, even as a guy who uses and will continue to use a mpbr-style zero on my woods rifle (MAXIMUM possible shots 200-ish yards, and even thats highly unlikely), I’m skeptical, but Im genuinely curious.
If you shoot a 1moa rifle, your cone of dispersion at 350 yards plus 3 tenths of drop could absolutely fall outside the vitals of an animal.You di
You do not have to hold over at 350, the bullet will in fact be in the vitals.
At 400 you’re just holding high but still on the animal.
This is the old school MPBR technique or dads used to use. It works very well but you hit a wall pretty quick.
The thread is about:
1. Reliably pushing the limits of MPBR
2. Reliably using a good Mil reticle to, in practice, push those limits further. Potentially out to 650 yards.
For me, 650 yards is the limit of what I would personally feel confident in shooting game at. Even then, high winds, particularly in mountainous terrain, would deter me.
I don’t think anyone is talking about a MPBR of 650.If you shoot a 1moa rifle, your cone of dispersion at 350 yards plus 3 tenths of drop could absolutely fall outside the vitals of an animal.
I fully understand the concept, it just doesn’t work. You can’t have MPBR at 650. Even with your 300 yard zero you’re missing under the animal at 365-380.
From 300-650 yards your bullet is dropping over 2 mils (4 feet). You have to hold over or dial or your bullet will be in the dirt.
So since you’re going to be accounting for drop anyway, why try to make up new math just to push the distance at which you have to hold by 75-100 yards?
They claim that they can just sight in 2.5634622 inches high at 100.And why is nobody talking about the inability to actually shoot a good zero at 300 yards?
I use the (10k?) binos. They work great!Op, just go for it, you’ll figure out your limits soon enough and what you may want to change if they aren’t what you’re after.
You just trying to get away from buying a new rangefinder? And I assume you have a chronograph?
Go grab a sig kilo 6k 8x32 and thank me later.
It will spit out your Mil hold for drop and wind as fast as it spits out the range and it’s instant fast.
And you can zero wherever you like and let the sig handle everything past mpbr. Plus add backup data that you are mentioning to stock or whatever so any ole rangefinder can feed you what you need.
I like Mpbr zero but don’t want any hold thinking until past that, also I don’t like big game only mpbr as I like to shoot coyotes so 5” or less generally my goal. Also as guys have mentioned your own field moa shift, less is more there imo. We generally shoot and kill before we need rangefinders and range after it’s dead lol so we set up for max speed in the fafo ranges. All solutions for beyond that will work, just practice so you’re good with it and giver.
I definitely misunderstood the first post, I thought it had been clear you specifically wanted your mpbr to reach to 650. Which I agree isnt realistic.I don’t think anyone is talking about a MPBR of 650.
Unless they come out with a cartridge that shoots like 8,000 fps.
Nobody is saying you can’t shoot at 100 yards to adjust the scope, but the starting point is 300 yards. Scopes dial down below zero as well as up. For scopes that don’t dial it’s as simple as knowing what the height of impact above the aiming point should be. Right? Or is there a something I’m missing.And why is nobody talking about the inability to actually shoot a good zero at 300 yards?
Are you using the ballistic function of them? Where you input your details to the app and create the profile for that rifle/load/zero, then sync the curve to the bino unit?I use the (10k?) binos. They work great!
I think if you actually get out and attempt this in field conditions on 8-10” targets, your theory will fall apart. Holding for elevation and wind in field conditions at 600+ yards is not the best method for making accurate hits on targetOkay, so I’m working on a project I would like some feedback on.
I have a Sako S20 in 7mm RM that’s just been sitting around, unfired, for over a year. I started playing with the ballistics in my calculator and I got an idea. If I blend the merits of the old school, hold fur, simplicity with the newer understanding of ballistics, I might have the best of both worlds.
The goal:
-not have to worry about dialing a scope until 650 yards or more.
-not have to be really precise with a wind call until further than that range.
-Be able to simply line the reticle up and pull the trigger for most hunting situations.
………however, if the situation calls for it, easily be able to dial as much as necessary.
I working with a 150 ELDX at 3,300 fps. G1 BC is .570. I’m going to use a SWFA 3-9 in Mil.
The numbers, at my elevation (6,500 ft) are as follows:
Zero: 300 yards.
350…..no hold necessary at all!
400 .5 mils
450 .78 mils
500 1.06 mil
550 1.36 mil
600 1.67 mil
650 1.99 mil
Basically, I can just quickly use the reticle, hold slightly into the wind, and the bullet will land in the vitals.
As far as wind, this is an 8mph load. So up to 650, it’s not a lot to worry about.
The biggest problem right now is that I’m in the 20 ft lb recoil range. So it’s doable but challenging to spot shots. However, with the zoom pulled back, it’s actually pretty achievable.
In the future, a 22 creed with a 77tmk would be a light recoiling alternative.
Worth pursuing?