I posted this in another thread on rangefinders, but thought I should post this as it's own thread. While most manufacturers offer some kind of angle compensated distance mode for their rangefinder, you should use that mode with caution because the one thing the rangefinder cannot compensate for is wind and if you use the compensated value which will be shorter than the line of sight (LOS) value and you punch that into your ballistics calculator you could end up with an incorrect wind hold value. I put this below chart together because I am a visual learner and thought this might help better explain why the wind value is different between the two measurements.
EDIT: @TacticalDillhole has pointed out this is NOT an issue if you have an LRF with Bluetooth that is connecting to the Kestrel and providing the solution for both drop AND wind, which is something to keep in mind. This is ONLY for LRF units that are stand alone, or LRF units that have built in ballistics (for drop) but no connectivity to identify wind holds.
It has also been pointed out that rarely will we shoot at such extreme angles, even when hunting in the mountains, so if we reduce the angle in the above example from 40° to 15° then the variance for the wind is even less, and one could argue whether the ability to guesstimate wind at distance (especially in mountain terrain with hills, valleys, cliff faces, etc.) is of greater concern than the error introduced by the angle adjusted distance. The below chart maps out what this difference could mean:
EDIT: @TacticalDillhole has pointed out this is NOT an issue if you have an LRF with Bluetooth that is connecting to the Kestrel and providing the solution for both drop AND wind, which is something to keep in mind. This is ONLY for LRF units that are stand alone, or LRF units that have built in ballistics (for drop) but no connectivity to identify wind holds.
It has also been pointed out that rarely will we shoot at such extreme angles, even when hunting in the mountains, so if we reduce the angle in the above example from 40° to 15° then the variance for the wind is even less, and one could argue whether the ability to guesstimate wind at distance (especially in mountain terrain with hills, valleys, cliff faces, etc.) is of greater concern than the error introduced by the angle adjusted distance. The below chart maps out what this difference could mean:
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