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Hunting
Long Range Hunting & Shooting
Confirming Drops
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<blockquote data-quote="eddybo" data-source="post: 434279" data-attributes="member: 7194"><p>tall targets are a great way to determine whether your scope dials correctly. measure your drops, convert to moa, dial that into your scope, use the bullet hole that you measured to as your new point of aim, if verticale is correct your scope dials are gtg.I always sigh my rifles in at long range then set my dials to match my trajectory data, then dial back to confirm my 100 yard zero. if you do that after you have confirmed your drops at numerous ranges and tweaked your data to match your actual drops it can minimize errors in scope calibrations.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="eddybo, post: 434279, member: 7194"] tall targets are a great way to determine whether your scope dials correctly. measure your drops, convert to moa, dial that into your scope, use the bullet hole that you measured to as your new point of aim, if verticale is correct your scope dials are gtg.I always sigh my rifles in at long range then set my dials to match my trajectory data, then dial back to confirm my 100 yard zero. if you do that after you have confirmed your drops at numerous ranges and tweaked your data to match your actual drops it can minimize errors in scope calibrations. [/QUOTE]
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