I have been primarily a paper puncher for the past few years and once you get your elevation it is primarily a game of windage and fundamentals. Moving to steel out to 1,100 yards plus has put a new challenge into my shooting and I am having some problems. I know the velocity of my rounds and I am shooting sub 1/2 MOA groups at 100. I run the ballistics tables to get my data for the day and now even have a progam on my Android. This is all well and good and I am very consistant with hits out to 400 - 500 yards. Beyond that the spotter (who is very good) is telling me that I am 1, 2, 3 Minutes high. The farther out the more over the target I am shooting.
During the mid day break at last Sunday's match I went to the 100 yard sight in range and started with 1 MOA hitting 1 inch high at 100 yards. The MOA and Inches correlated well until I got up to putting on 7 - 8 MOA. Then I started to see the bullet impact increase. When I got to 10 MOA I was hitting 11.5" inches high. When I got to 15 MOA I was hitting 17" high.
I know that a MOA is ~ 1.047 inches. Doing the math would incidate that my scope is making adjustments in inches higher than the MOA on the elevation dial. Am I approaching this correctly?
I went to the range today with another gun / scope and different caliber and experienced a similar set of results.
thanks for your comments and advice.
During the mid day break at last Sunday's match I went to the 100 yard sight in range and started with 1 MOA hitting 1 inch high at 100 yards. The MOA and Inches correlated well until I got up to putting on 7 - 8 MOA. Then I started to see the bullet impact increase. When I got to 10 MOA I was hitting 11.5" inches high. When I got to 15 MOA I was hitting 17" high.
I know that a MOA is ~ 1.047 inches. Doing the math would incidate that my scope is making adjustments in inches higher than the MOA on the elevation dial. Am I approaching this correctly?
I went to the range today with another gun / scope and different caliber and experienced a similar set of results.
thanks for your comments and advice.