Roedeer 1962
Well-Known Member
It’s surprising how much the bullet drops going down hill we all zero on level ish ground never downhill to see what happens , a good lesson learnt
You cut me deep, sir.You bought a Blaser?
Yep it's neglible at 110 yds.rather than a 30 degrees 110yrds making much difference.
...and they say you'll never use trigonometry after you leave school!Using the cosine value of .87 for a 30deg shot, you multiply the line of sight distance by the cosine value. So the corrected range for 110yds with a 30deg angle is 96yds.
Yes. But the range is foreshortened too, so you've got a combination of things going on.With the bullet placement isnt it a case of the impact it has on the bullets path through the deers body? Therefore if your shooting steeply downhill the bullet needs to go in high so passes out low rather then passing through flat? This way it goes through the vitals (heart and lungs) rather then going through low and missing them. Or am I missing something (pardon the pun)
30 degrees at that distance would make the shot in ballistic terms circa 10-15% less than the actual range so ballistically it becomes circa a 90-95 yard shot. The basic principle is that shooting at angles up/down the round will hit “high” due to the way gravity is pulling on the bullet at those angles
A very honest account. I'd probably be more inclined to think the rifle was off myself, rather than a 30 degrees 110yrds making much difference.
It will be a sub 1inch difference. The more important thing to remember when shooting game at high/low angles is to visualise the bullet path through the animal at that angle in the same way you compensate for engine room shots when the animal is standing quartering on or awayBut then, what is the average bullet drop between 95 & 110yds ? Looking at "Ballistic AE", there's under 1/4" difference in drop on my 6.5cm. Can that be right, I was expecting it to be much more ?
Im going out after muntjac later this week and typically they are likely to be at much shorter ranges then I normally shoot. My 6.5 Creed is zeroed at 150 yards so I checked it on paper at 50 yards and 100 yards. Shot about 1.5 inches high at 50 and about an inch at 100 so 1/4'' that you mention sounds about right.But then, what is the average bullet drop between 95 & 110yds ? Looking at "Ballistic AE", there's under 1/4" difference in drop on my 6.5cm. Can that be right, I was expecting it to be much more ?
I'll most definitely be checking zero before I use the rifle again. I'm pretty the cockup was entirely on myself though.
Absolutely this. My fault entirely. I'm just extremely relieved that it was rectified swiftlyI think you’ve cocked up the first shot and under duress the second and third were no better
I shot 2 reds through the stomachs at 100 yards yesterday morning. 1st off sticks, second 10 mins later off bipod. New(ish) Alpex scope and POA looked good on playback but both bullets went through stomachs and diaphragms (only discovered on gralloch). All I can think is that zero has shifted but it's too wet and windy out there to check today. Very p'd off!