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I start at 25 yards on a 1/4 inch graph paper with a 5 one inch squares
prone with a sling or at a bench with a rest I lay in the best 3 shots I can holding the bottom edge of that square but center left right
then with those 3 rounds if I have a group and I should I count squares at 25 yards every square is 1MOA dial in that correction for left right. I will dial in an elevation correction to stay about an 1 to 1.5 inches low at 25 yards then I fire 2-3 more rounds if they are grouped center but about an inch to inch and a half low time to move to 100 yards.
a 1/4 inch is 1 MOA at 25 yards so on a 1/4 minute click scope 4 clicks to every 1/4 inch square I need to move. you can measure but the light graph with the dark squares makes it easy to count off.
at 100 yards it depends on the optic or irons for what target I use about a 2 inch square on point works for most optics the vertical and horizontal cross hairs line up with the points of the square on point the diagonal of a 2x2 inch square is 2.82 so very close to 3 inches I want that 100 yard group say for a 223 , 308 , 30-06 to be 1 1/2 inches above point of aim so just off the point of the square I fire 2-3 then adjust if I felt they were good shots.
same thing measure how far vertical and horizontal I want to go then dial it in at 100 yards 1MOA =1.047" until you get to 500 yards or further. round to 1 inch and if you shoot 100 meters which is 109 yards close enough technically 104.7 yards would be the point it is 1 inch so close enough it works for both yards and meters at 100
when I have it just off the tip of the square which is about 1.5 inches high I will move to 200 for confirmation often at 200 I will just paint the steel black and shoot I can see the impacts with my binoculars I am shooting for the center or I may paint a dot I want all my rounds to impact in a group where I am aiming
what I am shooting determines if it is 200 yards or 200 meters 218 yards. that is the extent of my regular range.
if I need to collect data farther I have to go to the farm.
at 200 I may fine adjust left right to make it center or fine adjust the elevation to hit point of aim
at 200 on a 1/4 moa click scope each click is 1/2 inch
at 300 it is 3/4 of an inch
at 400 it is an inch.
make sure you read the manual for your optic some are 1/2 moa and that will have you double what you intended on every adjustment.
Mrad or Mill Radians is for another time if you have an optic in mrads
America only has one issue, we have a Responsibility crisis and everything else stems from it.
Re: Sighting in your rifle
[Re: Posco]
#7978995 10/24/2309:19 PM10/24/2309:19 PM
I was was talking to an ex Army sniper instructor today picking his brain about various shooting topics. I asked him how often he cleaned his rifle between shots. He told me a dirty bore shoots more accurately than a clean, cold bore. That sure sounded counterintuitive to me.
When i was behind the gun during my days. I never cleaned my rifle, only pushed a dry patch down it. Only time it saw a bore brush was when storing it. When it was time to go to work. I shot around 5 rounds to confirm zero and dirty the bore so to speak. Clean barrel always thru the first shot high. Also, remember, first shot from cold barrel ( heat isn't your friend) is the accurate and money maker. More then two shots usually revealed your position. Sarge
A hero voluntary walks into the dangers of the unknown Freedom is accomplished by good men willing to do bad things to bad people
Re: Sighting in your rifle
[Re: Posco]
#7979001 10/24/2309:25 PM10/24/2309:25 PM
If new scope bore sight it. Shoot 1 time at 25 yards. Adjust as needed. Move to 100 yards
As for cleaning the bore . Sniper was right . I have a 6 mm that is 48 years and the bore has not been cleaned in 30 years. Not shot a lot anymore. But it will drive a tack right out of the safe . Also got a savage axis 270 that had NEVER been cleaned . 130 grain federal it shoots pea sized group at 100 off sand bags
Re: Sighting in your rifle
[Re: Posco]
#7979013 10/24/2309:31 PM10/24/2309:31 PM
I will say I've had scopes go bad and that is an effort in frustration until u realize it's the scope. I shoot often enough now I think I'd recognize it pretty quick if it happens again.
Re: Sighting in your rifle
[Re: jbyrd63]
#7979016 10/24/2309:33 PM10/24/2309:33 PM
If new scope bore sight it. Shoot 1 time at 25 yards. Adjust as needed. Move to 100 yards
As for cleaning the bore . Sniper was right . I have a 6 mm that is 48 years and the bore has not been cleaned in 30 years. Not shot a lot anymore. But it will drive a tack right out of the safe . Also got a savage axis 270 that had NEVER been cleaned . 130 grain federal it shoots pea sized group at 100 off sand bags
My old 721 Remington in 300 H&H was an honest 1/2 inch rifle. I took it on an elk hunt and it POURED rain on us. After that it didn't shoot worth a hoot, like 4 inch groups. I blamed a warped stock. I scrubbed the bore for 5-6 hours. I have owned the rifle for 30 years and had never scrubbed the bore. After thoroughly scrubbing the bore (and changing nothing else) it will do 3 shots you can cover with a quarter at 100 yards.
Last edited by 160user; 10/24/2309:34 PM.
I have nothing clever to put here.
Re: Sighting in your rifle
[Re: Posco]
#7979017 10/24/2309:36 PM10/24/2309:36 PM
Depending on the gun I'll generally zero off of bipod and rear bag because that's generally how I'm shooting. That and I've had some guns give different POI from.a bag vs a bipod. Some don't seem to care some do, all depends.
15-25 pop the bolt old school bore site . Look down the bore center the target and then move the reticle till it matches with what I'm seeing on the bore.
Depending on what I'm shooing I'll do one shot and if it's on paper I'll keep my reticle on the aiming point and adjust to the bullet hole. Now if it's HV round like my moss berge going 3000fps I'll just run out to 100yd because it should be shooing pretty flat but if it's something like my cast bullets or something that's slower or more finicky I'll shoot another two to confirm where it is. I've had deal where it's dead on at 25 but off to the side at 100yd. Extra two or three rounds at 25 keeps you from cashing your tail at 100yd. Especially if you don't have a camera hooked up to your spotting scope like I do.
Anyhow go to 100yd and confirm I'm in paper shoot a group minimum 3 round 5rd preferred. Move reticle back t winning points them move to the groups. Three round to confirm I'm as dead center as I can get. Then shoot some targets . Can do it in 10rd and have something good nuff but 20 rd is what I'm happy with
Also don't like to do the whole thigh high at this so it's good out to whatever . Been there done that just ne we been happy with it. Zero in dead at 100yd work up a dope card with my ballistic apps see what that looks like and confirm..been much much happier with that. Not good at shooting paper past 100-125yd . Can I I g steel and targets haut fun out to 500yd though. Have a 4" gong that I'll set out and shoot to confirm dope, I do like shooing more then most
Last edited by Wolfdog91; 10/24/2309:47 PM.
Re: Sighting in your rifle
[Re: Savell]
#7979029 10/24/2309:46 PM10/24/2309:46 PM
… get on paper aiming at bullseye.. 1 shot … vice your gun with crosshair on bullseye… adjust crosshair to the hole your bullet made with your gun stationary in the vice
^this
Re: Sighting in your rifle
[Re: Posco]
#7979030 10/24/2309:55 PM10/24/2309:55 PM
On the subject of cleaning..... This guy is the current F class ( 1000yd ) WORLD champion and this is his thoughts on cleaning. He's also has multiple interviews with premium barrel manufacturers, actual snipers , bench rest champions and other FClass guys , all compere at an EXTREMELY high level so..
Re: Sighting in your rifle
[Re: Posco]
#7979059 10/24/2310:41 PM10/24/2310:41 PM
a 7mm mag has a lot of kick. You really don't need one if your deer hunting. Sure they work but if I were just deer hunting I would use a lesser caliber. You want to be comfortable with the gun you shoot. Because if it hurts you, you will not be as accurate with it. Not saying you would be afraid but lets just say apprehensive. I would move on from it. Lots of good information here. Don't trust boresighters. You can get it on paper at a hundred by looking thru the barrel.
Re: Sighting in your rifle
[Re: Posco]
#7979078 10/24/2311:27 PM10/24/2311:27 PM
Been meaning to ask, I've been seeing a lot of vets and active duty saying the easiest way is to sight 0 at 37yds. At 300 yds you'll be at cd size area of sighted at 37yds. I've never heard this, is this true?
Last edited by adam m; 10/24/2311:28 PM. Reason: Added text
Re: Sighting in your rifle
[Re: adam m]
#7979081 10/24/2311:35 PM10/24/2311:35 PM
Been meaning to ask, I've been seeing a lot of vets and active duty saying the easiest way is to sight 0 at 37yds. At 300 yds you'll be at cd size area of sighted at 37yds. I've never heard this, is this true?
Remember that's for a BATTLE zero, meaning zeroing like that is good for shooing a man sized target from the belt up. You also need to aim correctly still per distance per hold over Most people we had who could zero but still fail quality never could under stand the different holds
Re: Sighting in your rifle
[Re: Posco]
#7979234 10/25/2307:45 AM10/25/2307:45 AM
I was was talking to an ex Army sniper instructor today picking his brain about various shooting topics. I asked him how often he cleaned his rifle between shots. He told me a dirty bore shoots more accurately than a clean, cold bore. That sure sounded counterintuitive to me.
after 5-10 rounds in a barrel after cleaning the bore is nearly identical shot to shot , consistent is better than clean
a clean bore you have all your cleaning factors did you run 2 dry after your oil patch or 1 you create a bigger variation with a minor variation in your cleaning.
target shooters will call it a fouling shot particularly in black powder your getting the barrel to the state it will be for the rest of the rounds.
many competitions allow some "sighters"
Carlos Halthcock did teach clean cold bore CCB data collection it as much drives home the function of cleaning identical every time
but it isn't the most accurate this is why a CCB shot may be a few inches off a fouled bore shot
CCB data was more necessary in the days of corrosive ammo
and while collecting CCB data is a tedious thing it would make you a better shooter
lead sleds can get you right close but you won't have a lead sled in the field so there comes a time you have to get off the sled and shoot how you will shoot in the field , bag , bipod , sling , sticks however you shoot in the field is how you want to get your final zero
Last edited by GREENCOUNTYPETE; 10/25/2307:48 AM.
America only has one issue, we have a Responsibility crisis and everything else stems from it.
Re: Sighting in your rifle
[Re: Posco]
#7979239 10/25/2307:53 AM10/25/2307:53 AM
Thanks wolf. They were saying they use this technique for every rifle even their hunting rifles. They do 3 shots at 37 yds and they are done. I find it intriguing and am not going to test it on mine until end of the hunting season.
Re: Sighting in your rifle
[Re: Wolfdog91]
#7979281 10/25/2308:53 AM10/25/2308:53 AM
On the subject of cleaning..... This guy is the current F class ( 1000yd ) WORLD champion and this is his thoughts on cleaning. He's also has multiple interviews with premium barrel manufacturers, actual snipers , bench rest champions and other FClass guys , all compere at an EXTREMELY high level so..
This might be the ticket .BUT one important thing I heard was after 400 rounds his group opens up. If I shoot more than 2 times in the deer woods i'm missing or i'm on doe patrol. I haven't shot 400 rounds total thru my 270. I haven't shot 400 rounds thru my 6mm in last 25 years TOTAL. If a hunter shoots 10 rounds a year thru his "hunting" rifle it takes 40 years to shoot 400 rounds. Most on here are just hunters.
Re: Sighting in your rifle
[Re: Posco]
#7979286 10/25/2309:07 AM10/25/2309:07 AM
Back in the Spring I was working with a rifle and was getting whacky results from scope clicks, so took that scope off to send to Leupold. Replaced it with a Nikon my kid had been using on his rifle. My first shot missed clean at 25 yards. Was struggling to understand why until I did a quick bore sighting. He had been trying to shoot at half a mile and that scope did not have enough elevation adjustment to get him there, so he replaced it......but had left the scope in fully elevated position. That got it back on paper and was off and running. Lesson learned, bore sight it before taking the first shot.
Also, somewhere in the middle of all that, watched a video from Leupold, and for new scopes, they recommend running a new scope up and down full range from top to bottom and side to side and do that 2 or 3 times......, then return them to center. That is to "excercise" the springs to ease up on any memory they may have developed. Had never heard that one before.
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