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Hunting
Long Range Hunting & Shooting
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<blockquote data-quote="User4302021" data-source="post: 1493786" data-attributes="member: 105322"><p>Seems like everyone here is giving you all kinds of reasons why you missed. Except, none of the reasons they have given, even if you combined several together at one time, would account for the sheer size of the misses you were experiencing.</p><p></p><p>Niether does anyone seem to grasp that you zero'd at distance before the hunt, and did a sort of zero confirmation after the hunt.</p><p></p><p>Your ballistics program wasn't the problem.</p><p>Your zero wasn't the problem.</p><p>your parallax wasn't the problem.</p><p>Loading the bipod wasn't the problem.</p><p></p><p>You answered your own question in your original post with point #3. The only thing mentioned in this whole thread that would give you such a drastic and disappearing shift of Point of Impact is that you were mowing grass, plain and simple. I've seen it, I've done it. It sucks. </p><p></p><p>Watch your mechanical offset (the height of the scope above bore), and don't shoot grass. You will be fine.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="User4302021, post: 1493786, member: 105322"] Seems like everyone here is giving you all kinds of reasons why you missed. Except, none of the reasons they have given, even if you combined several together at one time, would account for the sheer size of the misses you were experiencing. Niether does anyone seem to grasp that you zero'd at distance before the hunt, and did a sort of zero confirmation after the hunt. Your ballistics program wasn't the problem. Your zero wasn't the problem. your parallax wasn't the problem. Loading the bipod wasn't the problem. You answered your own question in your original post with point #3. The only thing mentioned in this whole thread that would give you such a drastic and disappearing shift of Point of Impact is that you were mowing grass, plain and simple. I've seen it, I've done it. It sucks. Watch your mechanical offset (the height of the scope above bore), and don't shoot grass. You will be fine. [/QUOTE]
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