fishwater
Well-Known Member
I am looking for a little input here please.
I was shooting the other day and encountered something weird.
A little background info: I am shooting 300 GR. OTM's out of a .338 LMAI that I got on here 2nd hand. I have had the gun 3 months and it has always shot very good. I have shot just over 120 rounds through it so far. I have a NF ATACR, and the scope is mounted totally straight. I have a Holland's level bubble, and I have tested it at 100 yards by dialing up 40 MOA and the bullet hits directly over a 100 yard zero shot, (OK maybe it's off by 1/4 inch or so... good enough for me... LOL.) Anyways, the point is that the scope is properly mounted and I do not cant the rifle when I shoot.
The shot...
Yesterday I was shooting at a 14" gong at 1220 yards. The shot was -4 deg downhill. The wind was coming in steady straight from the left at about 4 mph according to my Kestrel 2500. (The forecast for that day was a 10 mph wind.) I entered all my data into shooter, and it came back with a 30.6 MOA elevation hold, and a 3.0 MOA left windage correction. I shot once and nobody saw anything... Hmmm...
Shot again, and we saw an impact, I was perfect height, but I was around 6 MOA right! So I dialed in another 6 1/2 MOA and was on target. I proceeded to hit the 14" gong 3 times and even a milk jug at 1220 yards with that solution.
What I am wondering is: In order for me to get the shooter app to tell me the proper 9.5 MOA windage hold for that day, (121.7 inches, or about 10 feet.) I needed to tell it that there was a 17 mph left to right wind!
I was shooting across a VERY wide open canyon, and the wind was coming in right off a lake, right up the valley. But where I was it was only 4 mph. Elevation was around 2000 feet.
Now, I am a novice long range shooter, but this seems a little weird to me..
Any ideas on what may have been happening that day? Or is it normal for the wind to be highly concentrated coming through a canyon like that? 17 mph seems a little high to me.
Thanks.
I was shooting the other day and encountered something weird.
A little background info: I am shooting 300 GR. OTM's out of a .338 LMAI that I got on here 2nd hand. I have had the gun 3 months and it has always shot very good. I have shot just over 120 rounds through it so far. I have a NF ATACR, and the scope is mounted totally straight. I have a Holland's level bubble, and I have tested it at 100 yards by dialing up 40 MOA and the bullet hits directly over a 100 yard zero shot, (OK maybe it's off by 1/4 inch or so... good enough for me... LOL.) Anyways, the point is that the scope is properly mounted and I do not cant the rifle when I shoot.
The shot...
Yesterday I was shooting at a 14" gong at 1220 yards. The shot was -4 deg downhill. The wind was coming in steady straight from the left at about 4 mph according to my Kestrel 2500. (The forecast for that day was a 10 mph wind.) I entered all my data into shooter, and it came back with a 30.6 MOA elevation hold, and a 3.0 MOA left windage correction. I shot once and nobody saw anything... Hmmm...
Shot again, and we saw an impact, I was perfect height, but I was around 6 MOA right! So I dialed in another 6 1/2 MOA and was on target. I proceeded to hit the 14" gong 3 times and even a milk jug at 1220 yards with that solution.
What I am wondering is: In order for me to get the shooter app to tell me the proper 9.5 MOA windage hold for that day, (121.7 inches, or about 10 feet.) I needed to tell it that there was a 17 mph left to right wind!
I was shooting across a VERY wide open canyon, and the wind was coming in right off a lake, right up the valley. But where I was it was only 4 mph. Elevation was around 2000 feet.
Now, I am a novice long range shooter, but this seems a little weird to me..
Any ideas on what may have been happening that day? Or is it normal for the wind to be highly concentrated coming through a canyon like that? 17 mph seems a little high to me.
Thanks.