Yep.No
But I have switched to RF binoculars, I missed an opportunity on a great MD buck going back and forth between binos and RF.
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No
But I have switched to RF binoculars, I missed an opportunity on a great MD buck going back and forth between binos and RF.
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no I haven't pulled a moose tag since, maybe next season? if you bring up the only forum I've ever been banned from you should explain why I was banned? I'll do it for you, it was for trying to warn/save as many as possible about the lies surrounding covid and the shots from our government and mediaAh yes. The Stinky Coyote ‘what if’s’… I remember you from Alberta Outdoorsmen before you were banned, (Shoot any moose in the arse lately?) I usually can’t be bothered, but I’ll humor your trolling this time…
ok fair enough, you weren't clear about the beyond mpbr in the first description and I was aware that could be the case, so not really a relatable example for this thread and we covered that it wasn't gonna happen without a partner, that's why I added in the variables in the hypothetical so we could all see how it very well could have been and had you been solo and beyond your 100 yard zero point blank range but still well within a mpbr zero had you chosen that...we're off in the weeds completely now discussing a not relatable experience but I tried to make one that would be, all the bestThe scenario I outlined was well beyond MPBR, and wasn’t happening without a solid range. With or without a hunting partner.
I know my drops 800 and in. 150-250M? I’ll guesstimate range and hold accordingly. No rangefinder or MPBR required. Beyond 250-300M, I’m wanting a laser range.
well, long range 'hunting' is still hunting and you have to start somewhere, it's ok to discuss where we start from and why, we don't just have special blinders on when we go afield that eliminates anything alive inside 300 yards from our vision lolI like how we're in the long range hunting forum, but we're getting a bunch of hypotheticals about jump shooting spooky whitetails at 150 yards...
No, dialing doesn't take to long for me.
haven't read all the responses yet but so at risk of pointing out the obvious, a coyote at 100 is about the same as a whitetail at 300, both flighty af and paranoid, so stands to reason your deer kills will come about 3x further than your coyote kills, most can math the dots on the subject, the coyote is also more paranoid and flightier quarry than whitetail so they really are an awesome target to train for big game, better than steelSeeing how this is in the LR forum, I'd venture to say that most coyotes are shot much closer than what we consider LR for deer. I've shot deer more than three times as far as I've ever shot a coyote and had plenty of time to dial and judge wind.
When I go with good coyote hunters the shots are inside of 50 yards 99% of the time.
every hunt can be a learning experience, every foresight into 'what ifs' and others combined lessons are things that can be used to eliminate as many of those as possible, and that is exactly what this thread is about, we all have different comfort levels and acceptance levels of many of theseNo
But I have switched to RF binoculars, I missed an opportunity on a great MD buck going back and forth between binos and RF.
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lmao, no kidding, I was wondering when this might start coming out in discussion, I don't think you're alone here, there's lots of mule deer heavy guys here and they are way different, we hunt em both in Alberta, muley's are walk in the park in comparisonI don't hunt whitetails.
Yup, takes too long, added 2-3 steps unnecessarily, works fine for all range work, works fine for plenty of big game situations, maybe even most, but it will catch you out, you will meet Murphy when you really don't want to.
step 1. your pull out and use a rangefinder
step 2. you consult your data to see what to dial to
step 3. you dial
You can eliminate step 2 with a speed dial turret already set up in yards so just dial to the yardage.
Or...just up the rifle and shoot middle of kill zone. Hunt whitetails much? Not that coyotes count for this discussion but chase them around with a 100 yard zero for awhile and see how that goes, great practice for whitetails fyi. For the game that uses it's vision and distance to stay safe vs the game that is paranoid and flighty...one of these things is almost mandatory. Hunting...animals...not targets.
dialling from 100 zero for mpbr zero big game hunting takes too long, adds 3 steps steps (ranging, correction solution calculating, then applying the correction solution), in a zone of hunting where time is most sensitive, especially so on a few of the big game species we chase, maybe less important for others, and could be handled with raising the rifle and getting crosshair in middle of front end and pulling trigger before that tail flickers and they are gone from your life foreverI'm not sure where you're going with any of this.
you don't do anything without the rangefinder? that's what mpbr zero is for...it eliminates the need to take all of those steps you just listed, do you not have rough idea what mpbr looks like afield without the instruments? the ranging comes out when it is beyond mpbr and all the time in the world, you can't identify your targets with naked eye or low/mid magnification range setting on the scope inside mpbr?If I range the animal and it's within MPBR, I simply shoot it. That's obvious to me and has nothing to do with my question.
All those steps I just listed take only seconds total.you don't do anything without the rangefinder? that's what mpbr zero is for...it eliminates the need to take all of those steps you just listed, do you not have rough idea what mpbr looks like afield without the instruments? the ranging comes out when it is beyond mpbr and all the time in the world, you can't identify your targets with naked eye or low/mid magnification range setting on the scope inside mpbr?