Does anyone zero a little left to account for some spin drift?
My solver tells me I have 1/4 MOA of spin drift at 500 yards, but in practice it seems closer to 1/2 MOA (I'm shooting an 8 twist 6.5CM). If I hold on the center of a 10" plate I consistently hit on the right third of the plate. If I hold on the left third of the plate I hit the center. If I'm shooting clay pigeons I have to hold off the left edge to break them (again at 500 yards). This is after many sessions, different conditions, different zeros (rezeroing after working on the rifle, etc.).
So, I'm thinking I should zero a 1/4 MOA left at 100 yards as a compromise to take out some of this drift. Anyone do this?
Let me head off some distractions..."you can't shoot good enough groups for it to matter", "you can't call wind good enough for it to matter", "you can't zero your rifle good enough for it to matter", etc... Ok, probably not, but for the sake of discussion, let's assume I can.
Thanks for your insight!
My solver tells me I have 1/4 MOA of spin drift at 500 yards, but in practice it seems closer to 1/2 MOA (I'm shooting an 8 twist 6.5CM). If I hold on the center of a 10" plate I consistently hit on the right third of the plate. If I hold on the left third of the plate I hit the center. If I'm shooting clay pigeons I have to hold off the left edge to break them (again at 500 yards). This is after many sessions, different conditions, different zeros (rezeroing after working on the rifle, etc.).
So, I'm thinking I should zero a 1/4 MOA left at 100 yards as a compromise to take out some of this drift. Anyone do this?
Let me head off some distractions..."you can't shoot good enough groups for it to matter", "you can't call wind good enough for it to matter", "you can't zero your rifle good enough for it to matter", etc... Ok, probably not, but for the sake of discussion, let's assume I can.
Thanks for your insight!