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Hunting
Extreme Long Range Hunting & Shooting (ELR)
Data for shooting at higher elevations
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<blockquote data-quote="yobuck" data-source="post: 2245653" data-attributes="member: 12443"><p>Well common sense is a requirement in pretty much everything we do in life.</p><p>Practice wont necessarily always produce perfect, but as a rule improvement takes place when we do, and thats true of all things.</p><p>So if a shooter is capable of producing 1/2" groups with his factory made rifle at 100 yds, why then arent his groups proportionately the same at longer distances?</p><p>And since any control the shooter might have ends at the instant the projectile leaves the muzzel, what difference would a better gun have made?</p><p>And of coarse the logical answer is none, the difference in performance would be due to conditions encountered by the bullet itself while on its way to the target.</p><p>Now of coarse some might ague thats an over simplification of facts, which is what much of what this discussion is about.</p><p>Practical minds vs technical minds.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="yobuck, post: 2245653, member: 12443"] Well common sense is a requirement in pretty much everything we do in life. Practice wont necessarily always produce perfect, but as a rule improvement takes place when we do, and thats true of all things. So if a shooter is capable of producing 1/2” groups with his factory made rifle at 100 yds, why then arent his groups proportionately the same at longer distances? And since any control the shooter might have ends at the instant the projectile leaves the muzzel, what difference would a better gun have made? And of coarse the logical answer is none, the difference in performance would be due to conditions encountered by the bullet itself while on its way to the target. Now of coarse some might ague thats an over simplification of facts, which is what much of what this discussion is about. Practical minds vs technical minds. [/QUOTE]
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Data for shooting at higher elevations
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