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Fitting The Long Range Rifle By Shawn Carlock
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<blockquote data-quote="nheninge" data-source="post: 270780" data-attributes="member: 13085"><p>Excellent article, with excellent points! Shooting from different positions/conditions is so important. However, one thing to minimize this "positional change is to buying scopes with parallax adjustment and use them on the range so it is second nature in the field. One simple extra step (side focus) helps to minimize "reticulitis" (<em>not </em>the medical definition) from shooting in different positions. A scope adjusted to minimize parallax at the right distance will make a big difference!</p><p></p><p>Go to the range when it is windy/raining/snowing instead of shooting some fictional character from home on x-box! I thought I had a pretty good grouping rifle until I went on a really windy day. I had a 4 inch vertical spread at 600 yards, and a 4 foot horizontal spread. Lots more work needed!</p><p></p><p>Good job!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="nheninge, post: 270780, member: 13085"] Excellent article, with excellent points! Shooting from different positions/conditions is so important. However, one thing to minimize this "positional change is to buying scopes with parallax adjustment and use them on the range so it is second nature in the field. One simple extra step (side focus) helps to minimize "reticulitis" ([I]not [/I]the medical definition) from shooting in different positions. A scope adjusted to minimize parallax at the right distance will make a big difference! Go to the range when it is windy/raining/snowing instead of shooting some fictional character from home on x-box! I thought I had a pretty good grouping rifle until I went on a really windy day. I had a 4 inch vertical spread at 600 yards, and a 4 foot horizontal spread. Lots more work needed! Good job! [/QUOTE]
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