The Shoot2hunt Podcast

I've heard the Gunwerks guys talk about it before and some of the stuff they said makes sense. The rangefinder giving a shoot to distance is key in my opinion. Then if your buddy or guide says he moved 50 yards one way it's easy to correct.

Range finder giving immediate correction is still mo better IMO. Say target moved 50 yards further and that adds 4 tenths to elevation. I can easily adjust 4 clicks without taking my eye out of the scope and dont need to look at the tiny #'s on my turret trying to figure where 425 yards is.

Edit: I didn't consider the point deep enough - if a hunting buddy is ranging with their nocks/RF that doesn't have your ballistics on board, that could absolutely be a good justification / use case for "shoot to" yardage marks. Might have to change my tune and add them where it makes sense..
 
Range finder giving immediate correction is still mo better IMO. Say target moved 50 yards further and that adds 4 tenths to elevation. I can easily adjust 4 clicks without taking my eye out of the scope and dont need to look at the tiny #'s on my turret trying to figure where 425 yards is.

Edit: I didn't consider the point deep enough - if a hunting buddy is ranging with their nocks/RF that doesn't have your ballistics on board, that could absolutely be a good justification / use case for "shoot to" yardage marks. Might have to change my tune and add them where it makes sense..
I think your edit is exactly the use case they were describing and knowing Gunwerks marketing/customer base it would probably be the guide.
 
I use white electric tape and write the yardage. I range and then dial. Seems to work well for me.

My rifles shoot too fast to do quick drops. So the quick math is of no use to me.

I don’t have a fancy rangefinder that spits out the dope? That would be cool.
 
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