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Hunting
Long Range Hunting & Shooting
Flatness of trajectory
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<blockquote data-quote="Newbie" data-source="post: 11294" data-attributes="member: 1921"><p>Dave King,</p><p></p><p> Do you consider "Danger Space" of much relevance at all to civilian long range shooting? Do you know if it of much significance in regards to sniping?</p><p></p><p> What I'm mostly been thinking about is which rounds will allow for the most tolerance in regards to distance approximation errors. For example, if the target is 500 yards away, what rounds will "forgive" the most in terms of how far away the approximation is. I've noticed that there are instances where a round with more actual flight time (and correspondingly more bullet drop) will actually allow for more error while still maintaining shot placement in the specified kill zone (even though this usually means you will have to crank your scope a little more) and whether or not others consider this to be as significant as total bullet drop and/or the number of click adjustments one must make on his scope.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Newbie, post: 11294, member: 1921"] Dave King, Do you consider "Danger Space" of much relevance at all to civilian long range shooting? Do you know if it of much significance in regards to sniping? What I'm mostly been thinking about is which rounds will allow for the most tolerance in regards to distance approximation errors. For example, if the target is 500 yards away, what rounds will "forgive" the most in terms of how far away the approximation is. I've noticed that there are instances where a round with more actual flight time (and correspondingly more bullet drop) will actually allow for more error while still maintaining shot placement in the specified kill zone (even though this usually means you will have to crank your scope a little more) and whether or not others consider this to be as significant as total bullet drop and/or the number of click adjustments one must make on his scope. [/QUOTE]
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