If it was me I’d step cal up one size and get a fail scope 10x power to 14x and you will be good to go , I believe a lot of nz hunters are way over scoped
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
If it was me I’d step cal up one size and get a fail scope 10x power to 14x and you will be good to go , I believe a lot of nz hunters are way over scoped
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Read my post before this one you replied to as i basically said what you said.
as i said previous practice is key to shooting long-range, For me an my experience ive never wounded or lost and animal shooting longer ranges 300m+. When i can i go into the high country and practice
in the hills where i will be hunting as it helps get an understanding of the variables that will affect the shot, rainy and windy crappy days great way to pass the time and get something out of it. I always try
and close the distance as close as possible to minimize the impact the variables will have on the shot being taken. But as i have said previous practice is key to success, its all good having all the latest and
greatest money can buy but that doesn't put animals on the ground its only assists in doing so but if you dont know how to read the conditions from, lack of practice ends up in wounding and missing animals.
And i fully agree about headshots there's always a time and place where they are necessary and are the best bet for securing an animal but i dont as a rule take them anymore after taking the face off a red hind
knocked her on her ass but was wounded and required a follow up shot when i could have easily taken a neck or shoulder shot so i learned from that experience and changed the way i shoot animals.
If you are going to look at taking shots past the 300m mark then you also have to factor into your costings a good quality range finder. Look at the ballistic data and see what happens if your range estimate of 400m is 50/100m out. this error is very real when you are looking across broken ground and/or gullies. In my personal experience the range finder is a real eye opener as well as a major advantage past say 300m. I have tried both the old fashioned hold over and ballistic turrets, holdover is just not as precise, there is always the temptation to "give it a little more". Having said that if you go the ballistic turret route then you need the best quality you can possible afford in order to get repeatable adjustment. I recently switched to a Swarovski 3.5-18 with the ballistic turrets it gave me heart palpitations when I forked out the 2 grand. However the results are fantastic, 100% repeatable zero, those turrets can be used in low light without even looking at them. My 2 cents.
ZeroPak Vacuum Sealers, Zero air Zero waste
@zeropak makes a very good point
A large % of people suck when it comes to shooting further than 200/300m. You can multiply that by several factors when it comes to range estimation...
Doing a tall target test, as well as a return-to-zero square for ANY scope is well worth doing if you are going to be shooting further than simple hold-over ranges.
Viva la Howa ! R.I.P. Toby | Black rifles matter... | #illegitimate_ute
@Carbine we read your post alright and credit the sense in the bulk of it but wouldn't encourage new shooters to expect to shoot animals at 500m and not with a $1000 scope.
Yeah i agree neither would i, point i was trying to get across is practice practice practice then when the opportunity presents itself you are prepared trying to encourage the guy to get into it and you dont need a 3000$ scope to learn something new.
Can see on youtube some good reviews of shooters mostly in the usa on optics doing tracking and dialing tests which demonstrate how well some of these 1000$ scope can dial repeatedly and accurately.
If you read around, unfortunately, you just can't get a scope that dials very well under $1000. Accurate dialing is the most expensive part of any scope. There is a good number of scopes that have really good glass but can not dial accurately. So if you are a budget, It probably is cheaper to get a scope with accurate Christmas reticle and hold over rather than dial.
https://www.snipershide.com/precisio...-1059x1440.png
see this chart, even super expensive scopes do not always dial 100% accurate
270 is a harmonic divisor number[1]
270 is the fourth number that is divisible by its average integer divisor[2]
270 is a practical number, by the second definition
The sum of the coprime counts for the first 29 integers is 270
270 is a sparsely totient number, the largest integer with 72 as its totient
Given 6 elements, there are 270 square permutations[3]
10! has 270 divisors
270 is the smallest positive integer that has divisors ending by digits 1, 2, …, 9.
Bookmarks