Re: .308 at the range today
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: roggom</div><div class="ubbcode-body">If I read correctly OP's POI is the same as his POA.
OP if you are wondering why there was no apparent drop, it was because of the angle. Shooting at steep anlges will put your bullet high, negating the drop due to distance. Study the riflemans rule and angle cosine to get the correct adjusments. </div></div>
The angle doesn't negate drop. Gravity is constant. People get into trouble ranging angles because they range the point to point distance from their shooting position to their target. The problem is, gravity only has time to act on the bullet between the muzzle and the HORIZONTAL distance to the target, which is shorter than the point to point distance.
If you range point to point and its 750 yards, the horizontal distance may only be 575 yards. So in essence, you are shooting at 575 using 750 yard dope, that's why it hits high.
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Graham</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Okie,
What he wrote was that for the first shot at the rock he aimed 4MOA high and hit center: </div></div>
I think this is the source of your confusion. My interpretation of his post was that he aimed 4MOA high, and hit 4MOA high, so he aimed center on the second shot and hit center.
To answer his question as to why his point of aim was point of impact at 268 yards...my answer is this. You are estimating the size of your target, and it's only that, a guess. So to start, it could have been bigger than your realize, hence giving you more 'fudge' room for what qualifies as a 'center hit'
Second, your difference in dope from 100 to 250 shouldn't be much. If you are still shooting MOA at 250 you could land the bullet anywhere withing a 5" circumference circle around the 'center' and that's already accounted for half the difference in drop at that distance. Add in factors like altitude and air density, and how those may have been different at your shooting location from where the manufacturer measured it and printed it on the box, and you can chew into 10 inches pretty quick. That's before we even get into variations in muzzle velocity, or shooter inconsistencies like improper parallax adjustment, trigger flinches, trigger slapping, etc.
Rich