Free: Contests & Raffles.
I'd have to mount the scope under my rifle, no need for MOA rails, I'll just zip tie it to a speed square.
On a more serious note, that is truly awesome. I'd love to learn from some of the long distance experts on the forum here. I'm just getting started and learning as I go. Still having trouble with consistent hits at 600 yards.
Quote from: Stein on August 27, 2018, 05:15:14 PMI'd have to mount the scope under my rifle, no need for MOA rails, I'll just zip tie it to a speed square.I might try that now! Quote from: N7XW on August 27, 2018, 04:32:03 PMOn a more serious note, that is truly awesome. I'd love to learn from some of the long distance experts on the forum here. I'm just getting started and learning as I go. Still having trouble with consistent hits at 600 yards. My advice is to ignore all the advice people give you. I have an incredibly unconventional shooting style and whenever somebody comes out with me, they try to give me pointers. I hear everything from my gun is canted, I'm not dialing enough wind, my atmospherics are wrong, my trigger squeeze is bad, I need to true my BC, my ES and SD are too high, etc. That keeps on going until I actually make a hit, and then everyone stops talking. The only good advice I'll give you is to find a large dirt bank or rock face to shoot at. If you're shooting at a gong, it's hard to spot your misses. If you don't know where your shots are actually going it's really hard to figure out what's causing you to miss. Shooting at a dirt bank will help you see where you're actually hitting relative to your point of aim.
Quote from: JimmyHoffa on August 19, 2018, 02:28:30 PMWhat is bigger than you usually use that isn't crew served?I've got 2 teenage kids, so I'm not ruling out the crew served weapons yet.
What is bigger than you usually use that isn't crew served?