Hello, I guess I am looking for some advice and I am not certain that I posted this on the correct page...sorry if that is the case but here goes.
I am shooting a 6x47L with 105 vld hunting bullets that chrono at 3070. This past Friday evening, I went and verified dope at a buddies place at 400, 600 ad 1200( I hit .1 low with 9.4 mils so I adjusted BC so that my Kestrel called for 9.5 and hit the waterline with a nice 3 shot group. Wind at FV 5mph R to L and all was where it should be. Next morning I head out to the match 3 hours away, shoot the first stage starting at 1158. Kestrel calls for 8.8 mils(seemed to me that I should not be .6 down for 1158 instead of 1200 but I dialed it and shot....way low...and the rifle shot low for the next 3 stages from 1158 walking in to 858. Kestrel aside, how does a rifle that is hitting on the water line 15 hours earlier end up that low?
a few details that my matter. the match was very sunny(mirage was present) and the sun was rising directly behind me and dead on to the target, shining on the ass of the bullet all the way in. The wind was about 5-7 mph and twitchy from and angle behind also. 80ish degrees...9am or so. My buddys rifle was also .3 low. the next day he shot a match and his dope was right back on? I have no idea what happened....what changed?
I even shot a KYL rack at 458 and couldnt hardly hit with a rifle that was completely doped the night before. Next thing I know, we move in to the 325 target on another area of the range and now I am running high and missing....
does keeping your Kestrel in your pocket heat it up and cause lousy dope? did sunlight play tricks on my eyes? Both?
This is not the first time I feel like i have had a rifle that had good dope and yet ended up with a pile of unexplained misses and then check the dope after the match and it lines up but if it is the case, how does a fella recognize what causes it and fix it before he tosses a match in the trash can?
Sorry for being long winded and thanks for your time because I am out of ideas....
Jamie
I am shooting a 6x47L with 105 vld hunting bullets that chrono at 3070. This past Friday evening, I went and verified dope at a buddies place at 400, 600 ad 1200( I hit .1 low with 9.4 mils so I adjusted BC so that my Kestrel called for 9.5 and hit the waterline with a nice 3 shot group. Wind at FV 5mph R to L and all was where it should be. Next morning I head out to the match 3 hours away, shoot the first stage starting at 1158. Kestrel calls for 8.8 mils(seemed to me that I should not be .6 down for 1158 instead of 1200 but I dialed it and shot....way low...and the rifle shot low for the next 3 stages from 1158 walking in to 858. Kestrel aside, how does a rifle that is hitting on the water line 15 hours earlier end up that low?
a few details that my matter. the match was very sunny(mirage was present) and the sun was rising directly behind me and dead on to the target, shining on the ass of the bullet all the way in. The wind was about 5-7 mph and twitchy from and angle behind also. 80ish degrees...9am or so. My buddys rifle was also .3 low. the next day he shot a match and his dope was right back on? I have no idea what happened....what changed?
I even shot a KYL rack at 458 and couldnt hardly hit with a rifle that was completely doped the night before. Next thing I know, we move in to the 325 target on another area of the range and now I am running high and missing....
does keeping your Kestrel in your pocket heat it up and cause lousy dope? did sunlight play tricks on my eyes? Both?
This is not the first time I feel like i have had a rifle that had good dope and yet ended up with a pile of unexplained misses and then check the dope after the match and it lines up but if it is the case, how does a fella recognize what causes it and fix it before he tosses a match in the trash can?
Sorry for being long winded and thanks for your time because I am out of ideas....
Jamie