I saw a somewhat similar thread on here about this, but I thought I would ask a more specific question about this.
I zero'd in at 100 yards about week ago, and I didn't move the turrets because we ran out of daylight. Yesterday, I was getting ready to move my turrets up, when my friend told me I would need to move it DOWN. I was confused, but he went on to explain this is the phenomenon he's always experienced when he shoots on this part of the property (with all his guns). I bet him he was wrong.
I took a few shots at 200 yards yesterday, and I shot about 5" high! WTF?! I thought I was zero'd well at 100 yards. I figure I my zero at 100 yards must be way off. We ran out of daylight again, so I couldn't do anymore to investigate.
I think the spot we are shooting 200 yards from might actually sit up another 6' in elevation...but that isn't going to make a big difference is it? Shooting angle would down a small small amount, but I doubt that could account for shooting 5" high at 200 yards, could it?
We didn't have the Kestrel working on either day of shooting, but it seemed a little windy on the day of shooting 100 yards, and yesterday it seemed very very calm. Similar temps.
Another friend showed up yesterday and I mentioned this to him. He went on to describe something else...This is something other people have talked about before too, which is that the bullet is still travelling up when it impacts the target. I am familiar with this discussion, though I don't think the bullet would still be travelling upward, away from the horizontal at 200 yards, unless I really messed up my 100 yard zero.
Is it possible to mess up a scope sight-in so badly, a bullet literally does not reach its peak elevation and begin to fall toward the horizontal, when impacting a target?
I'm lost on what could cause this, other than an improper zero at a shorter distance.
I zero'd in at 100 yards about week ago, and I didn't move the turrets because we ran out of daylight. Yesterday, I was getting ready to move my turrets up, when my friend told me I would need to move it DOWN. I was confused, but he went on to explain this is the phenomenon he's always experienced when he shoots on this part of the property (with all his guns). I bet him he was wrong.
I took a few shots at 200 yards yesterday, and I shot about 5" high! WTF?! I thought I was zero'd well at 100 yards. I figure I my zero at 100 yards must be way off. We ran out of daylight again, so I couldn't do anymore to investigate.
I think the spot we are shooting 200 yards from might actually sit up another 6' in elevation...but that isn't going to make a big difference is it? Shooting angle would down a small small amount, but I doubt that could account for shooting 5" high at 200 yards, could it?
We didn't have the Kestrel working on either day of shooting, but it seemed a little windy on the day of shooting 100 yards, and yesterday it seemed very very calm. Similar temps.
Another friend showed up yesterday and I mentioned this to him. He went on to describe something else...This is something other people have talked about before too, which is that the bullet is still travelling up when it impacts the target. I am familiar with this discussion, though I don't think the bullet would still be travelling upward, away from the horizontal at 200 yards, unless I really messed up my 100 yard zero.
Is it possible to mess up a scope sight-in so badly, a bullet literally does not reach its peak elevation and begin to fall toward the horizontal, when impacting a target?
I'm lost on what could cause this, other than an improper zero at a shorter distance.