paulbshooting
Well-Known Member
My 308 is zeroed for 200m. Most shots tend to be 100-150m but the fallow on fields can be out to 200m.
Nothing says you're British like mixing your units
Good point - and may be the deciding factor to go for the 100m zero if you’re a head shot manThe prob with zeroing high at 100 is 70- 100 is often the distance people head shoot at.
Head shots are risky enough without worrying about stuff like that.
How do you know that?The prob with zeroing high at 100 is 70- 100 is often the distance people head shoot at.
How do you know that?
What is the empirical evidence?
Good point - and may be the deciding factor to go for the 100m zero if you’re a head shot manthe old 308 howitzer trajectory ain’t as forgiving as some
Don’t head shoot then.The prob with zeroing high at 100 is 70- 100 is often the distance people head shoot at.
Head shots are risky enough without worrying about stuff like that.
Don’t head shoot then.
Simples

Hmmm.
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Whilst I understand there is an argument in commercial culling head-shooting is not for me, be it deer or even foxes - I need all the help I can get and the sleep to match - my conscience means too much to me.
I think there is a need to make it clear that these are not “head- shots”- they are BRAIN-SHOTS - i.e. a target maybe only 10% in area of the deer’s head - miss it and what remains of said head will likely disappear from view as the vey damaged deer takes it with it - over the far hill…
In my case and as you can see with a 100 zeroed rifle my 130gns 6.5 is more than an inch low at the 50 mark so (wrongly) using that as POA a Muntjac/CWD or Roe deer would likely be hit at the top of the jaw - anything other than a perfect shot would make it worse. Of course if said deer was obligingly standing perfectly broadside at exactly 50 then I could aim high to effect but what if it was at say 70? If said deer was face on a headshot without precise knowledge of distance and POI would in all likelihood strike said deer in the top lip, mid-snout or worse.
Conversely with the same scenario and a 200 zero the rifle is spot on at said 50 but what about 70/80, 120/160 etc…. aiming for that small head?
Clearly the bigger the target the less critical the 100 or 200 zero so broadside or hilar shots on say red hinds will, if the aim is true, result in a quick dispatch - so again why a headshot?
For thebop - the critical thing for me is know where your bullet is going at all distances; this can only really be achieved by spending time and money on the range - logging the results, and putting them into practice.
Class discuss…
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Yep so don’t do it.95% of the time- I don't. But some do.
Having a MPBR type zero designed for chest shooting- and then head shooting as a one off- seems like an easy way of wounding a deer to me.
That's a recipe for failure.Zero dead on at 100m, anything further use the reticle or if theres time dial the turret.
In which case set the ‘zero’ 2” high at 100 yards & then get on with the job in hand - shooting deer!Thats the ideal, but an awful lot of stalkers do not have easy access to 200m ranges.