And with a slightly dented eley wasp pellet.And with open sights!! rankster:
And riding a galloping horseYeah!!! That's the sort of shot they start little kids on! Using those airgun darts! In a Gat Gun! While blindfolded! Yeah!!! :biggrin:
Don't know but at that distance curvature and rotation of the earth would have to be taken into account
Air rifles mateNot a Rifleman then Ips?
Try to imagine a Trapshooter, but 100 times more anal, then multiply that by 10 and add at least another 1000. That's a Rifleman! :sarcastic:
Edit for spellin' :fie:
Well...firstly, you wouldn't zero a rifle like that at 200m. I used to scoff at the fools who were shooting their .243's and .308's at 100 or 200 yardsSkeet UK - give me a rough idea.
At 2000m with the .408 Cheytac, how much over the target would be the point of aim with a zero of say, 200m?
I'm not a rifle shooter, except a few brief dabbles, but only out to 300 yards max, so I really have no idea. Just interested to illustrate the real difficulty in a shot like this. :biggrin:
The PDA programs used to calculate this also have to vector in some adjustments for the earths rotation at this distance...once you go past 2000m things get silly!!!Skeet UK - give me a rough idea.
At 2000m with the .408 Cheytac, how much over the target would be the point of aim with a zero of say, 200m?
I'm not a rifle shooter, except a few brief dabbles, but only out to 300 yards max, so I really have no idea. Just interested to illustrate the real difficulty in a shot like this. :biggrin:
Definitely. If you get the correct conditions (slightly damp air), even at mid range distances of 500 yards you can see the loop of the bullet dropping into the target (Much like the vapour trail of an airliner).It really is a case of dropping the bullet on the target rather than shooting at it.
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