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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Rifles, Bullets, Barrels & Ballistics
How to true the BC
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<blockquote data-quote="Ckleeves" data-source="post: 2542681" data-attributes="member: 83259"><p>I would work everything in G7, whenever I was forced to use G1 with the first gen Leica RF's I always had trouble truing. I would probably start with .357? </p><p></p><p>Make sure your zero is dead on and I mean dead on at 100 yards. If your impacts are perfect out to 500 then chances are your input velocity is correct so I would try not to cheat it much. </p><p></p><p>Try to find a big piece of steel you can see your impacts on then paint a horizontal line and shoot at distance (800+) and use your reticle to measure how low you are then start cheating your input to match what your seeing on the target. Then try other distances closer and further to double check. </p><p></p><p>It also might be worth doing a quick check on your scopes tracking to make sure it's not tracking a little on the weak side.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ckleeves, post: 2542681, member: 83259"] I would work everything in G7, whenever I was forced to use G1 with the first gen Leica RF’s I always had trouble truing. I would probably start with .357? Make sure your zero is dead on and I mean dead on at 100 yards. If your impacts are perfect out to 500 then chances are your input velocity is correct so I would try not to cheat it much. Try to find a big piece of steel you can see your impacts on then paint a horizontal line and shoot at distance (800+) and use your reticle to measure how low you are then start cheating your input to match what your seeing on the target. Then try other distances closer and further to double check. It also might be worth doing a quick check on your scopes tracking to make sure it’s not tracking a little on the weak side. [/QUOTE]
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How to true the BC
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