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Hunting
Long Range Hunting & Shooting
Which kestrel?
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<blockquote data-quote="MMERSS" data-source="post: 923797" data-attributes="member: 63748"><p>All the 4000 series Kestrel meters have the Density Altitude (DA) option. This option is very handy using a ballistics program allowing DA for your environmental inputs. You don't need to use DA for inputs, you can still input temperature, pressure (with Altitude if set for Baro), and humidity. The question comes to what inputs do you want to make while hunting? Do you have a system already correcting for atmospheric conditions? I use the DA option almost exclusively. I only have to enter one 4-digit number into my computer for an atmospheric solution. Using the other option of having to input temp, baro and humidity is two additional inputs for the same or almost identical solution. Simple and easier tends to be the more attractive measure when hunting when it counts…..look at some of the scopes and range finders today already incorporating environmental conditions into their solution.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MMERSS, post: 923797, member: 63748"] All the 4000 series Kestrel meters have the Density Altitude (DA) option. This option is very handy using a ballistics program allowing DA for your environmental inputs. You don’t need to use DA for inputs, you can still input temperature, pressure (with Altitude if set for Baro), and humidity. The question comes to what inputs do you want to make while hunting? Do you have a system already correcting for atmospheric conditions? I use the DA option almost exclusively. I only have to enter one 4-digit number into my computer for an atmospheric solution. Using the other option of having to input temp, baro and humidity is two additional inputs for the same or almost identical solution. Simple and easier tends to be the more attractive measure when hunting when it counts…..look at some of the scopes and range finders today already incorporating environmental conditions into their solution. [/QUOTE]
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Which kestrel?
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