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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Long Range Scopes and Other Optics
who uses a spotting scope?
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<blockquote data-quote="tom m." data-source="post: 394477" data-attributes="member: 14956"><p>spotter in a spotting scope is definately needed for seeing trace, but tof is long enough after a grand, the shooter can usually get back in the scope and see impact. regardless of what the math says, i firmly believe any headwind cause impact to be high at looong range. i have been burned by that **** 1 oclock wind, several times, and by several moa. i am talking front range winds 20,30 plus. i don't know how skidish your game is, but the does we shoot don't really mind us taking sighter shots on objects near them. sometimes they look up, sometimes they keep eating, then they fall down on the second shot. this is the easiest thing to do if you have an unpredictable, vertical component to the wind.</p><p>tom</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="tom m., post: 394477, member: 14956"] spotter in a spotting scope is definately needed for seeing trace, but tof is long enough after a grand, the shooter can usually get back in the scope and see impact. regardless of what the math says, i firmly believe any headwind cause impact to be high at looong range. i have been burned by that **** 1 oclock wind, several times, and by several moa. i am talking front range winds 20,30 plus. i don't know how skidish your game is, but the does we shoot don't really mind us taking sighter shots on objects near them. sometimes they look up, sometimes they keep eating, then they fall down on the second shot. this is the easiest thing to do if you have an unpredictable, vertical component to the wind. tom [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Long Range Scopes and Other Optics
who uses a spotting scope?
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