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Join the contest SubscribeI would think dial then, hold over would be difficult considering your changing your zero when dialing, but I get what your saying. Giving the situation, many shooters may do differently. Unless returning to zero been shots.it really depends on the stage.
usually:
1) single target distance - i would think most people dial for that and don't just leave their turret on 0 and hold over. that's silly IMO.
2) 2 target distances - switching back and forth between near and far. most people dial for the close target and hold over for the far one. depending on the positions and time crunch - most people i know would hold over. some might dial each time however. some might even hold under (dial for far). a lot of people i shoot with don't like to hold under.
3) multiple target distances - near to far or far to near or similar. most people i know will dial for these. if you are only shooting from 1 or 2 positions most people would dial for these because they have plenty of time. if you are doing a lot of position changes - some might hold over to save time.
but as always - each situation is different so you plan accordingly.
In a regular PRS match do more shooters dial for elevation or use hold over, when dialing isn't required.
Dial whenever possible, unless constrained by time or by stage requirements.
I will do a mix of hold over or hold under, depending on target size/distance and wind hold required. Gotta be on point on your mental prep, it's very easy to hold the wrong thing especially when you start to mix in hold unders. Which reticle you run plays a part too. if you've got a christmas tree with precise wind holds that can help, otherwise it might make sense to dial for the far target so you can get precise wind holds then hold under and just estimate wind hold (assuming not enough time to dial).
Dial whenever possible, unless constrained by time or by stage requirements.
I will do a mix of hold over or hold under, depending on target size/distance and wind hold required. Gotta be on point on your mental prep, it's very easy to hold the wrong thing especially when you start to mix in hold unders. Which reticle you run plays a part too. if you've got a christmas tree with precise wind holds that can help, otherwise it might make sense to dial for the far target so you can get precise wind holds then hold under and just estimate wind hold (assuming not enough time to dial).
This exact same thing.it really depends on the stage.
usually:
1) single target distance - i would think most people dial for that and don't just leave their turret on 0 and hold over. that's silly IMO.
2) 2 target distances - switching back and forth between near and far. most people dial for the close target and hold over for the far one. depending on the positions and time crunch - most people i know would hold over. some might dial each time however. some might even hold under (dial for far). a lot of people i shoot with don't like to hold under.
3) multiple target distances - near to far or far to near or similar. most people i know will dial for these. if you are only shooting from 1 or 2 positions most people would dial for these because they have plenty of time. if you are doing a lot of position changes - some might hold over to save time.
but as always - each situation is different so you plan accordingly.
This is what it's all about. Fun. Time management, optics adjustments, rifle manipulation and body control all come with experience. You'll get better every match. You'll learn a lot about what will and won't work for you by watching other shooters with more experience. Soon enough the stages you were timing out on just a short time before you'll be breezing through with time to spare. Hope you keep going to matches.I just did my first match yesterday! Tons of fun. This one was pretty straightforward on 5 of the 6 stages. Engage 1 target at whatever distance from different positions on those 5 stages. Everyone dialed elevation for those because you're only going after 1 target at 1 distance.
Then there was one stage where you had 135 seconds to engage 10 targets at 10 different distances. 2 shots at each Target before you could go to the next. I dialed for elevation and held for wind for each of those as well. Time flew by between finding the targets, checking what elevation, dialing, getting set, and firing.
I was able to put my first shot on the 4th target when time ran out.
Some guys held over for both wind and elevation, some guys dialed. There only a handful of guys able to get their shots on all targets. Those guys were all excellent in their time management, weapon and optic manipulations, and they were regulars at this at this range and very familiar with what targets were at what distances.
I definitely plan on doing more. It was a great baseline evaluation of all my assorted rifle skills.