West2East
Lil-Rokslider
I've been doing a lot of work the past few years on practicing out to 700yds. In that time, I have noticed a few things.
1. Inside 400yds, fundamentals of position and trigger press can be enough to get you on target. Even in sitting positions, I feel really confident on a 2 minute target. First round impacts almost every time. Even with wind, it seems like a "bracket" fits inside the 2 minute target so staying on the plate is relatively easy.
2. Over 400yds, things get tricky. Wind, especially in the mountains, is hard to call confidently with a novel condition and make a first round impact. I would say out to 500yds, I am confident with a 2 minute target, in field positions.
I recently bought a tikka 223 and have already shot more in the last 3 weeks than last year and I shot a lot last year. I have 1000 68 gr Frontier ammo on order and I have a few questions for those of you that are comfortable shooting past 500 yds. I have been working on a lot of positional shooting and groups/ drills at 100yds. My average group is probably at best 1.2MOA to 2 MOA.
What is the biggest jump to make to get comfortable past 400yds? Is this just rounds over time on shots over 400? Is it continued groups/drills at 100? I had a thread last year where I was working pretty hard on my wind calls and I "feel" that I can normally get a pretty good wind call (enough for 500ish yd shots on a deer or elk sized target).
Also, I am wondering about ammo. Running the math, if me and my ammo/rifle can only shoot 2ish Min in mountain conditions, how are people diagnosing problems in the field? Are you just shooting at the target and if you hit it, that's good enough? Are you shooting groups to determine what your actual groups are at distance? Thinking more on the WEZ side of the math for hit probability, it's hard to diagnose what is wind vs. group size vs. position.
Any thoughts or information you can provide is helpful. I've read most if not all of the threads that have danced around this subject, but I'd like to hear how people have made the jump with a 1.2-2Min gun from 400 to 700.
Edit to add: I'm probably at 600rds last year and on track for 1600ish this year, so I am out shooting at least once or twice a week and hopefully more once we get more daylight around work hours.
Thanks!
1. Inside 400yds, fundamentals of position and trigger press can be enough to get you on target. Even in sitting positions, I feel really confident on a 2 minute target. First round impacts almost every time. Even with wind, it seems like a "bracket" fits inside the 2 minute target so staying on the plate is relatively easy.
2. Over 400yds, things get tricky. Wind, especially in the mountains, is hard to call confidently with a novel condition and make a first round impact. I would say out to 500yds, I am confident with a 2 minute target, in field positions.
I recently bought a tikka 223 and have already shot more in the last 3 weeks than last year and I shot a lot last year. I have 1000 68 gr Frontier ammo on order and I have a few questions for those of you that are comfortable shooting past 500 yds. I have been working on a lot of positional shooting and groups/ drills at 100yds. My average group is probably at best 1.2MOA to 2 MOA.
What is the biggest jump to make to get comfortable past 400yds? Is this just rounds over time on shots over 400? Is it continued groups/drills at 100? I had a thread last year where I was working pretty hard on my wind calls and I "feel" that I can normally get a pretty good wind call (enough for 500ish yd shots on a deer or elk sized target).
Also, I am wondering about ammo. Running the math, if me and my ammo/rifle can only shoot 2ish Min in mountain conditions, how are people diagnosing problems in the field? Are you just shooting at the target and if you hit it, that's good enough? Are you shooting groups to determine what your actual groups are at distance? Thinking more on the WEZ side of the math for hit probability, it's hard to diagnose what is wind vs. group size vs. position.
Any thoughts or information you can provide is helpful. I've read most if not all of the threads that have danced around this subject, but I'd like to hear how people have made the jump with a 1.2-2Min gun from 400 to 700.
Edit to add: I'm probably at 600rds last year and on track for 1600ish this year, so I am out shooting at least once or twice a week and hopefully more once we get more daylight around work hours.
Thanks!
