Here's the situation:
That's the bad news. The good news is that I was able, with good spotting, to adjust quickly and hit at all long distances. Seeing the reaction target light up at 1,600 yards is pretty freakin' fun.
Is this normal and expected when pushing a 6.5 Creedmoor to unnaturally long distances?
Is there a way to predict this and build it into the ballistics for a better 1st-round ELD hit rate?
Would this phenomenon go away with better / heavier ammo ... like 147 ELDM's?
Thanks for sharing any advice or experiences that might help with 1st-shot-hits next time.
Side note ... I have longer-distance rifles that don't do this (300 Win Mag specifically) ... but I wanted to see just how far I could accurately shoot my 6.5-CM Tikka.
- Tikka T3x TAC A1 in 6.5 Creedmoor with Leupold Mark 5HD 5-25
- Hornady 6.5-CM American Gunner 140gr ammo
- Velocity meticulously documented via LabRadar
- Ballistics via Ketrel 5700 Elite with Applied Ballistics
- Sub-MOA tight groups at 100 yards to zero scope
That's the bad news. The good news is that I was able, with good spotting, to adjust quickly and hit at all long distances. Seeing the reaction target light up at 1,600 yards is pretty freakin' fun.
Is this normal and expected when pushing a 6.5 Creedmoor to unnaturally long distances?
Is there a way to predict this and build it into the ballistics for a better 1st-round ELD hit rate?
Would this phenomenon go away with better / heavier ammo ... like 147 ELDM's?
Thanks for sharing any advice or experiences that might help with 1st-shot-hits next time.
Side note ... I have longer-distance rifles that don't do this (300 Win Mag specifically) ... but I wanted to see just how far I could accurately shoot my 6.5-CM Tikka.