victorpolyakov33
FNG
- Joined
- Oct 9, 2023
- Messages
- 4
Kind of a long question but I feel the backstorry is important to understand it... My gun is zeroed at 100yrds. When my gun is cold bore/first shot it hits above the bullseye, and then all consecutive shots hit bullseye..(half inch difference from cold bore to warm bore) so I adjusted my zero to split the difference that way my cold bore shot hits top edge of bullseye and all consecutive/ warm bore shots hit bottom edge of bullseye, at 100yrd. This adjustment was 0.50 moa down. Whenever I'm shooting long range to confirm my dope I'm always shooting a "warm barrel" because I'll check my zero first, then I'll shoot 3 shot groups at different ranges (100-700yards). Never shooting a true cold bore at long range. Well my gun is primarily for hunting so the cold bore shot is what really counts.
That's why I think in theory bringing the zero down to split the bullseye would make sense that way at long range the the cold bore shot isn't too high but instead both cold bore and consecutive warm bore shots would be close to where you want to be hitting your target... The question is.. since I've never truly checked my dope with a cold barrel but only warm... by splitting the difference from cold bore and warm bore in theory my dope should stay the same? Bringing my cold bore long range shots just above to where my tested warm bore long range shots were? (yes I know the warm bore shots will now be a bit lower as well, but I'm trying to get best of both worlds in the event I need to take a follow up shot on an animal..)
Shooting a 147gr 6.5 creedmoor hornady eldm
Look what I'm looking for isn't an investigation on what could be the culprit on the high POI cold bore shot. Its the gun I've tested it. Im looking for input on whether or not my theory is correct on splitting the difference of warm barrel vs cold barrel shot POI that way I am getting "best of both worlds" in the event that I shoot at an animal 2 or more times... And how this could relate to my Pre established "warm barrel" 700yard long range DOPE. Is the gap in POI shit going to grow at longer distances? or is it going to stay constant 1/2 inch high? I'm not too worried as there is a difference in Acceptable accuracy for real world hunting scenarios vs match grade completion accuracy
I know there is no way to truly know without actually shooting and testing.
That's why I think in theory bringing the zero down to split the bullseye would make sense that way at long range the the cold bore shot isn't too high but instead both cold bore and consecutive warm bore shots would be close to where you want to be hitting your target... The question is.. since I've never truly checked my dope with a cold barrel but only warm... by splitting the difference from cold bore and warm bore in theory my dope should stay the same? Bringing my cold bore long range shots just above to where my tested warm bore long range shots were? (yes I know the warm bore shots will now be a bit lower as well, but I'm trying to get best of both worlds in the event I need to take a follow up shot on an animal..)
Shooting a 147gr 6.5 creedmoor hornady eldm
Look what I'm looking for isn't an investigation on what could be the culprit on the high POI cold bore shot. Its the gun I've tested it. Im looking for input on whether or not my theory is correct on splitting the difference of warm barrel vs cold barrel shot POI that way I am getting "best of both worlds" in the event that I shoot at an animal 2 or more times... And how this could relate to my Pre established "warm barrel" 700yard long range DOPE. Is the gap in POI shit going to grow at longer distances? or is it going to stay constant 1/2 inch high? I'm not too worried as there is a difference in Acceptable accuracy for real world hunting scenarios vs match grade completion accuracy
I know there is no way to truly know without actually shooting and testing.
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