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How do you read wind down range?
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<blockquote data-quote="Canhunter35" data-source="post: 1659205" data-attributes="member: 101677"><p>Since you asked for emphasis on elr, if I'm dialing more than 55 Moa I start to add multiples to my wind calls. Below 7mph winds I will multiply my best guess at linear wind call by 1.5 to compensate for higher altitude winds that the bullet will travel through, above 10mph I will multiply by 2. </p><p>On a side note besides trying to predict how the terrain is affecting wind, once your bullets is arcing enough it's often leaving ground wind, so as I travel I try to extroplate how the wind front is blowing in, sometimes it almost creates bulges or concaves causing slight angle changes on the wind against the bullet.</p><p>It gets to be a bit of a crap shoot and as yobuck said, a sighter tells the most information and allows to proper correction</p><p>The my 2cents to the conversation</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Canhunter35, post: 1659205, member: 101677"] Since you asked for emphasis on elr, if I’m dialing more than 55 Moa I start to add multiples to my wind calls. Below 7mph winds I will multiply my best guess at linear wind call by 1.5 to compensate for higher altitude winds that the bullet will travel through, above 10mph I will multiply by 2. On a side note besides trying to predict how the terrain is affecting wind, once your bullets is arcing enough it’s often leaving ground wind, so as I travel I try to extroplate how the wind front is blowing in, sometimes it almost creates bulges or concaves causing slight angle changes on the wind against the bullet. It gets to be a bit of a crap shoot and as yobuck said, a sighter tells the most information and allows to proper correction The my 2cents to the conversation [/QUOTE]
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