Hopefully that thread title wasn't too confusing. My preferred method of zeroing a scope is to boresight at 25 yds, shoot 1 round at 100 yards, place the reticle at the point of aim and then using the turrets, move the reticle to the point of impact for a 100 yard zero.
Now, lets say you have to establish a 100 yard zero on a 15 yard range. So far my method under these circumstances is to use a ballistic calculator to show me where the bullet would impact at 15 yards (usually an inch or so low) in order to be zeroed at 100 yards. After firing one round I adjust the turrets by the appropriate number of clicks - using a scope with 1/4 moa clicks, each click should be equal to .0392625" at 15 yards (1.047/4 = .26175; .26175/(100/15) = .0392625). Is there an easier way of doing this similar to the method in the opening sentence above?
How about if I need to zero the rifle to impact 3" high at 100 yards and I only have a 15 yard range to shoot on? Should I play around with the numbers until I find a zero range that corresponds to a bullet impact 3" high at 100 yds or is there a better way.
I know the easy answer is "go shoot on a 100 yard range", but that option is not available for this discussion.
Now, lets say you have to establish a 100 yard zero on a 15 yard range. So far my method under these circumstances is to use a ballistic calculator to show me where the bullet would impact at 15 yards (usually an inch or so low) in order to be zeroed at 100 yards. After firing one round I adjust the turrets by the appropriate number of clicks - using a scope with 1/4 moa clicks, each click should be equal to .0392625" at 15 yards (1.047/4 = .26175; .26175/(100/15) = .0392625). Is there an easier way of doing this similar to the method in the opening sentence above?
How about if I need to zero the rifle to impact 3" high at 100 yards and I only have a 15 yard range to shoot on? Should I play around with the numbers until I find a zero range that corresponds to a bullet impact 3" high at 100 yds or is there a better way.
I know the easy answer is "go shoot on a 100 yard range", but that option is not available for this discussion.
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