Hello,
I'm not a new shooter but I'm slowly progressing into the style of shooting that is discussed here on the Hide.
I'm looking at getting a Kestrel, and I see that the most popular version seems to be the 5700, that contains trajectory data and calculates your firing solution. My gut preference is to have the ballistic dope on paper, and just use the Kestrel and rangefinder/inclinometer to figure out what data to use. I'm comfortable with having things written down like that, and I'd rather have the data logistics on paper than in some kind of bluetooth/app/USB-cable/firmware update/forgot the battery charger mess.
I'm thinking I'd just need a small set of tables for each cartridge/rifle combination, and then I could choose the one that is close enough based on temperature and pressure, based on my collected data on muzzle velocity changes and (calculated) data on air pressure changes. Where I live and for the ranges I shoot at, pressure is only a relevant factor in extreme cases, but the temperature changes enough to be relevant.
If I go this way, then I'd go with a cheaper Kestrel and instead invest in some notebooks and some lamination paper for when I've filled out the tables.
Do you think I*m going to change my mind and have to go back and get "the right" Kestrel? Am I missing a "cry once" moment? Again - I just picked a LRF/binocular combination without the possibility to enter ballistic data, because I don't feel the need to integrate the data that is unique to my rifle & cartridge with a gadget.
I'm not a new shooter but I'm slowly progressing into the style of shooting that is discussed here on the Hide.
I'm looking at getting a Kestrel, and I see that the most popular version seems to be the 5700, that contains trajectory data and calculates your firing solution. My gut preference is to have the ballistic dope on paper, and just use the Kestrel and rangefinder/inclinometer to figure out what data to use. I'm comfortable with having things written down like that, and I'd rather have the data logistics on paper than in some kind of bluetooth/app/USB-cable/firmware update/forgot the battery charger mess.
I'm thinking I'd just need a small set of tables for each cartridge/rifle combination, and then I could choose the one that is close enough based on temperature and pressure, based on my collected data on muzzle velocity changes and (calculated) data on air pressure changes. Where I live and for the ranges I shoot at, pressure is only a relevant factor in extreme cases, but the temperature changes enough to be relevant.
If I go this way, then I'd go with a cheaper Kestrel and instead invest in some notebooks and some lamination paper for when I've filled out the tables.
Do you think I*m going to change my mind and have to go back and get "the right" Kestrel? Am I missing a "cry once" moment? Again - I just picked a LRF/binocular combination without the possibility to enter ballistic data, because I don't feel the need to integrate the data that is unique to my rifle & cartridge with a gadget.