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Long Range Competition
f-class for LRH practice
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<blockquote data-quote="Oliveralan" data-source="post: 512318" data-attributes="member: 20245"><p>Gorgeous F-class rifle! </p><p></p><p>However, I have to respectfully disagree as far as f-class for LRH practice. I find it close to useless, except for accuracy and vertical testing. The only shot that has practice value, IMO, is the first sighter. After that... Your either chasing the spotter, running and gunning, or waiting till the 2-4 large flags are pointing the way you want them to, and sending it.</p><p>I find this to have almost no real world wind doping value. If you completely ignore the flags, and just use brush, trees, mirage, etc, this value increases. However I still find f-class inefficient, as far as how much you learn per shot. One must shoot in the field, where hills, canyons, rivers, etc affect the wind velocity and direction.</p><p></p><p>I really enjoy f-class, and have has reasonable success, I don't really put it in the same drawer as LR hunting or practice for LRH.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Oliveralan, post: 512318, member: 20245"] Gorgeous F-class rifle! However, I have to respectfully disagree as far as f-class for LRH practice. I find it close to useless, except for accuracy and vertical testing. The only shot that has practice value, IMO, is the first sighter. After that... Your either chasing the spotter, running and gunning, or waiting till the 2-4 large flags are pointing the way you want them to, and sending it. I find this to have almost no real world wind doping value. If you completely ignore the flags, and just use brush, trees, mirage, etc, this value increases. However I still find f-class inefficient, as far as how much you learn per shot. One must shoot in the field, where hills, canyons, rivers, etc affect the wind velocity and direction. I really enjoy f-class, and have has reasonable success, I don't really put it in the same drawer as LR hunting or practice for LRH. [/QUOTE]
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f-class for LRH practice
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