OK, I'm sure this subject has been hashed a million times, but I can't seem to find a concise answer. So yeah, dumb question....
You have your $500 rifle with the $2,500 glass on it. You've chrono'd your hand loads and know the exact muzzle velocity. You have a $300 bipod and a rear bag that is super solid. You pull out the range finder and see that the target is 700 yards away. You've plugged all the relevant data into the ballistics calculator. You glance at the brand new Kestrel and read the wind as 5mph from the left so you dial in....wait, as you look down range, you see a streamer waving in the breeze, but it's pointing left so the wind is coming from the right at about 420 yards. Then further down range, another streamer is hanging straight down.....
Yeah, fun little story, but I'm sure we've all seen it. The question is, what do I believe as I attempt to correct for the wind? Do I simply input whatever the Kestrel tells me at my location or do I try to get an average based on all the down range indicators? Does the wind affect the shot more at the muzzle or down range? My relatively new-to-serious-precision-shooting mind says that the projectile will be more affected by the wind way down range where it's slowed considerably. If that's true, then why did I spend $800 on a Kestrel (I haven't, but it works with the story/question)?
You have your $500 rifle with the $2,500 glass on it. You've chrono'd your hand loads and know the exact muzzle velocity. You have a $300 bipod and a rear bag that is super solid. You pull out the range finder and see that the target is 700 yards away. You've plugged all the relevant data into the ballistics calculator. You glance at the brand new Kestrel and read the wind as 5mph from the left so you dial in....wait, as you look down range, you see a streamer waving in the breeze, but it's pointing left so the wind is coming from the right at about 420 yards. Then further down range, another streamer is hanging straight down.....
Yeah, fun little story, but I'm sure we've all seen it. The question is, what do I believe as I attempt to correct for the wind? Do I simply input whatever the Kestrel tells me at my location or do I try to get an average based on all the down range indicators? Does the wind affect the shot more at the muzzle or down range? My relatively new-to-serious-precision-shooting mind says that the projectile will be more affected by the wind way down range where it's slowed considerably. If that's true, then why did I spend $800 on a Kestrel (I haven't, but it works with the story/question)?