McCrapper
Lil-Rokslider
- Joined
- Mar 6, 2021
- Messages
- 150
The confidence in this thread is astounding.
I've decided to carry a heavy enough rifle that offhand past 50 yards is a no-go for me. For now I'm just going to go all in on supported positions like tripod, prone, or seated off a gamechanger bag.Ton of variability for sure. I'm fairly confident that I can shoot a tighter group at 400 yards prone off a pack than I can off-hand at 100 haha
Considering we're on a long range hunting thread on a forum that tends to collect individuals who are serious about their passions, I don't find that surprising at all.The confidence in this thread is astounding.
So, I’ll single myself out. This is what I initially wrote:Thank you- but that’s my point. 400 yards on animals is not what I would consider a “chip shot”, and my experience is when people say it is- they don’t have very much experience killing animals at 400+ yards. Though suppose it depends on someone’s definition of what a “chip shot” is.
The Cold Bire challenge on here revealed to any watching it- that a whole lot of “600 yards is a chip shot” believers missed once or both times at sub 500 yards on a 10” target.
Believing that any shot is a chip shot or an easy shot is often what leads to poor outcomes, because it means we aren’t giving the shot the attention it deserves. The last animal I killed was at 782 yards, the one before that was 1,106 yards, the one before at around 100 yards- I did not think any of them were chip shots. It’s just probabilities based on shooter, environment, and animal.
Ok, this is overstating it. Guns shoot predictably, but I should have said it was a shot with very high odds.To me a chip shot is one I cant miss.
Assuming a rock solid shooting position—prone or as-stable as prone—Im going to go out in a limb and say its 500 yards in easy wind conditions. Add in tricky wind and its shorter. It might be longer than 500 in ideal conditions, but thats +\- the range where small ranging errors, mirage, up/downdrafts, etc have surprised me.
I also think the cold bore challenge threads are an eye-opener in this regard. An awful lot of people missed on shots they thought they could make. Im no different.
Agreed. I’d wager a good amount that I could put a bullet within 5” of the bullseye under the parameters I gave.Considering we're on a long range hunting thread on a forum that tends to collect individuals who are serious about their passions, I don't find that surprising at all.
If this post was made on the Western Hunting Facebook page, and Jim Bob and Bubba were telling you about killing bulls at 600 with a lil Kentucky windage, I think you'd have a point to make.
This thread makes me certain we need to start implementing weapon restrictions. Growing up I never heard of someone shooting over 300 yds really, now everyone wants to send it @5-600 all the time. Bring on the open sight rifles baby!!!!
Yeah, todays muzzleloaders outshoot the rifles of years past.Growing up did guys have easy access to laser rangefinders? Ballistic apps? Portable weather stations? High BC projectiles and cartridges optimized for them?
That argument doesn't make a lot of sense.
I don't think anyone in this thread is shooting grandpa's .30-06 loaded with 180 core lokts and a duplex reticled scope haha
Open sight muzzleloaders and only traditional archery, none of that COMMUNIST (I mean compound) blasphemy. As someone who doesn't understand how animal populations/ecology works, I think weapon advancements have made hunters too effective and caused game populations to go down. I can prove it through anecdotes from a hungover fish and game guy I once talked to about it.This thread makes me certain we need to start implementing weapon restrictions. Growing up I never heard of someone shooting over 300 yds really, now everyone wants to send it @5-600 all the time. Bring on the open sight rifles baby!!!!
Who's we? Do you mean states need to start implementing restrictions on what rifle/scopes can be used?This thread makes me certain we need to start implementing weapon restrictions. Growing up I never heard of someone shooting over 300 yds really, now everyone wants to send it @5-600 all the time. Bring on the open sight rifles baby!!!!
You're making my pointGrowing up did guys have easy access to laser rangefinders? Ballistic apps? Portable weather stations? High BC projectiles and cartridges optimized for them?
That argument doesn't make a lot of sense.
I don't think anyone in this thread is shooting grandpa's .30-06 loaded with 180 core lokts and a duplex reticled scope haha
Yes. Max scope power, remove the ability to use BDS rangefinders and binos. Hell, I would be fine getting rid of range finders in generalWho's we? Do you mean states need to start implementing restrictions on what rifle/scopes can be used?
I would add open sight rifles as well.Open sight muzzleloaders and only traditional archery, none of that COMMUNIST (I mean compound) blasphemy. As someone who doesn't understand how animal populations/ecology works, I think weapon advancements have made hunters too effective and caused game populations to go down. I can prove it through anecdotes from a hungover fish and game guy I once talked to about it.
I would add open sight rifles as well.
I wonder how these "chip shot" distances would change if 25K was on the line and not an animal....
Do you own stock in weatherby rifles? This is how we get a bunch of 6.5-300 weatherby’s as the premier cartridge since it only drops X” at 500 yardsYes. Max scope power, remove the ability to use BDS rangefinders and binos. Hell, I would be fine getting rid of range finders in general
Haha. I know a guy back before rangefinders that shot a .300-378 for that reason.Do you own stock in weatherby rifles? This is how we get a bunch of 6.5-300 weatherby’s as the premier cartridge since it only drops X” at 500 yards