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What bullet and speed out of your 270? I know some folks are getting basically 6.5 PRC performance from a 270. Which I would consider right at the top end if not above the threshold of tolerable recoil for any decent volume of shooting.I dont want to take this post off topic. Im not sure if this is a tangent or if its a subset of the DS vs QD conversation. So @B_Reynolds_AK if this seems off topic please feel free to shut me down.
Re bdc @solarshooter I may very well be doing things wrong or only in part. But I shoot 2 rifles mainly, a 6.5cm and a .270win. The 6.5 fits into quickdrop well. I basically dont use my calculator except as an occasional double check. Out to the range I routinely practice (generally 550yards and under just based on available place to shoot) the error is always less than .2mil and generally .1 so theres really no relevant correction factor. If I go up 8000’ in da—that is from my local areas at 500-2000’, going up to where we hunt in the rockies at 8 or 9k’ elavation—the amount of error actually is less. So theres is NO correction to make.
My 270 on the other hand does not fit well into quick drop, I have to use a correction factor to make the same hits that I do with the 6.5. Then when I go up in elevation I need an additional correction factor, it ends up being over .6mil off. Im too dumb to effectively manage this mental load, and I commonly make mistakes applying the right correction. I DONT think the correction changes enough in the course of one hunt that it requires much of a change in real life. BUT I havent been able with my level of practice to apply it effectively even within one zone of DA.
Bottom line: quick drop is not the bottleneck on my 6.5. But it may be the bottleneck on my 270. I would not bother with a bdc turret on my 6.5 for all the reasons you outlined. But I think a bdc solution might be a benefit for me on my .270. Id be curious what form or some of the other folks have to say about that, especially given how forgiving of ranging errors some of the flat shooting cartridges can be at more moderate distances.
| Cartridge (velocity) | Drop in inches (550-500yds) | Inch Drop/10yds | 8” vs 10” target ranging error AKA Danger Space |
| 77tmk 223 (2750) | 74.9-57.7 (17.2”) | 3.44”/10yds | 23.2yds/29.0yds |
| 77tmk 22cm (3050) | 57.8-44.4 (13.4”) | 2.68”/10yds | 29.8yds/37.3yds |
| 116tmk 6um (3100) | 48.2-37.4 (10.8”) | 2.16”/10yds | 37.0yds/46.3yds |
129lrx @ about 3075fps mv.
BUT Im not talking volume of shooting. Im talking a ballistic solution for any shot. I practice with the 6.5, they are +\- the same gun so my practice easily transfers. Yes, recoil matters and thats a reason why someone might not choose a super-flat cartridge. Yet, the 270, 6.5prc and plenty of other flatter-shooting cartridges still exist, and those folks using them are still left to find a shooting solution—a corrected QD or a BDC turret of some sort are options for those folks. So while I agree that recoil matters, its not relevant for the question of “qd vs ds” or “if qd then why not bdc?”. Substitute a 22cm if you need in order to address the conceptual tradeoffs, I just tossed out the example Im most familiar with.
So my question—if your gun is too flat shooting to neatly fit into quick drop, then why not a bdc turret? The fact that it is a high danger-space cartridge mitigates some of the “close enough” factor inherent in any “quick” system. So if quick drop is “close enough”, then why ISNT a bdc turret also “close enough”, especially when paired with a high danger space cartridge? Or maybe the question is “since qd necessarily gains mental load with a high danger space cartridge, can one achieve something similar in terms of reducing mental load by utilizing a bdc turret with such a gun”?

So I read through this whole thread and others that are actively discussing the QD subject.How do you square Increased Danger Space with perfect Quick Drop?
These are both highly valued qualities, but, they don't necessarily compliment each other.
Where and when would you choose one gun over the other that is optimized for either?
Which will lead to increased effectiveness, hit rates and ultimately more killing?
Example 1: The 6 UM, developed with the intent of maximizing Danger Space. Does not line up with QD very well, ie 600 yards - 2.6 mil., requiring increased mental load to factor in the correction.
Example 2: 223 with 88 TMK's at 2750. Perfect Quick Drop ie 400 -2 mil, 500 - 3 mil, 600 - 4 mil.
Correction factors can change significantly with DA real time within one day on a hunt.
I know this won’t be a popular post, but I’m not concerned. What I’m doing is within my budget, legal, and fills my freezers.![]()
Thank you for the explanation and your reasonings!Some scenarios I have personally experienced many times which to me illustrate why QD is the most robust and flexible system:
You're on the gun, your buddy is ranging. He doesn't have your ballistics uploaded or he doesn't have a ballistic RF, and he can only tell you a range. What do you do?
Or, you are ranging for your buddy. Same situation flipped.
Or, you get a range and an elevation, get on the gun, then the animal trots 60yds closer to you and pauses. What do you do? Come off the gun and get the RF out? Or just correct instantly in your mind and hold/dial under?
Or, you have multiple targets or different fields of fire and you don't know where the animal will appear. Rather than having to remember a range and an elevation correction for each one, you can just remember range.
Quickdrop is not the most precise or the outright lowest mental load. But it is a guaranteed system that works without any external input in ALL scenarios with nearly ALL guns (other than a range, but there are tricks for that too). It's extremely robust and flexible.