After more than a year of building, testing, and practicing, I finally received my opportunity to shoot some four digit distances this weekend. The rifle was a rebuilt Sako TRG-S in 7mm Remington Magnum behind a 162 grain A-Max at what turned out to be 2950 fps (more on that later!)
I've had plenty of practice out to 500 meters, and was getting quite proficient at killing 3" clay pigeons. My DOPE seemed solid and was confirmed at 100m, 300m, and 500m. I used JBM's trajectory values with Litz's BC. I even checked my zero the day before attempting this longer distance.
I was given permission to use a local farmer's property. My 15"x25" steel IPSC target was placed in an open field, and my range finder pinged it at 1054 meters. The full value left to right cross-wind was steady off Lake Michigan at my guesstimated 13-18 mph.
According to the math, I needed 8.7 mils of elevation with a 2.6 mil hold for the wind. WELL . . . 37 goddamn shots later I finally hit the target!
In hindsight, I made a couple rookie mistakes. Obviously assuming my DOPE was good at untested distances was foolish, but I could have also helped myself greatly by placing my target against some sort of hill or backstop as to allow me to see my misses.
After the frustrating trial-and-error method of a little high, a little low, a little left and a little right was completed, my successful DOPE was 9.2 mils of elevation and 3.0 mils of windage (the wind turned out to be closer to 20 mph)
I was actually pretty damn close the first time, but since I was shooting blind, it took quite a bit of ammo to find my target. Stupid!
Interestingly, when I went back to JBM's trajectory calculator and starting playing with velocity, I was able to dial in a flight path that passed through all my tested points; 100m, 300m, 500m, and now 1050m. This new flight path had a velocity of 2950 fps. Before this, I was using 3000 fps, and it also passed through 100m, 300m, and 500m, but unfortunately put me 0.5 mils low at 1050m. Putting all my trust in my $100 chronograph was also a mistake. Live and learn I suppose!
I can't wait to try it again. This time I'm hopefully a little smarter. A word to the wise . . .
Also, anyone with more field experience, please critique my logic and let me know where I could of done things better.
<span style="font-weight: bold">The rifle</span>
<span style="font-weight: bold">Digital pic (1x) of the field</span>
<span style="font-weight: bold">Digital pic (4x) of the field</span>
You can just barely make out a white spec in front of the treeline, where the plowed field turns to taller grass
<span style="font-weight: bold">The results </span>
As you can see, the hits are low @ 9.2 mils. I decided to call it 9.3 mils in my logbook.
I've had plenty of practice out to 500 meters, and was getting quite proficient at killing 3" clay pigeons. My DOPE seemed solid and was confirmed at 100m, 300m, and 500m. I used JBM's trajectory values with Litz's BC. I even checked my zero the day before attempting this longer distance.
I was given permission to use a local farmer's property. My 15"x25" steel IPSC target was placed in an open field, and my range finder pinged it at 1054 meters. The full value left to right cross-wind was steady off Lake Michigan at my guesstimated 13-18 mph.
According to the math, I needed 8.7 mils of elevation with a 2.6 mil hold for the wind. WELL . . . 37 goddamn shots later I finally hit the target!
In hindsight, I made a couple rookie mistakes. Obviously assuming my DOPE was good at untested distances was foolish, but I could have also helped myself greatly by placing my target against some sort of hill or backstop as to allow me to see my misses.
After the frustrating trial-and-error method of a little high, a little low, a little left and a little right was completed, my successful DOPE was 9.2 mils of elevation and 3.0 mils of windage (the wind turned out to be closer to 20 mph)
I was actually pretty damn close the first time, but since I was shooting blind, it took quite a bit of ammo to find my target. Stupid!
Interestingly, when I went back to JBM's trajectory calculator and starting playing with velocity, I was able to dial in a flight path that passed through all my tested points; 100m, 300m, 500m, and now 1050m. This new flight path had a velocity of 2950 fps. Before this, I was using 3000 fps, and it also passed through 100m, 300m, and 500m, but unfortunately put me 0.5 mils low at 1050m. Putting all my trust in my $100 chronograph was also a mistake. Live and learn I suppose!
I can't wait to try it again. This time I'm hopefully a little smarter. A word to the wise . . .
Also, anyone with more field experience, please critique my logic and let me know where I could of done things better.
<span style="font-weight: bold">The rifle</span>
<span style="font-weight: bold">Digital pic (1x) of the field</span>
<span style="font-weight: bold">Digital pic (4x) of the field</span>
You can just barely make out a white spec in front of the treeline, where the plowed field turns to taller grass
<span style="font-weight: bold">The results </span>
As you can see, the hits are low @ 9.2 mils. I decided to call it 9.3 mils in my logbook.