Re: Rule of 9s (wind holdover)
People's brains work in different ways. What works for one person may not work for another.
My rule is to use what works for me.
For example - moving targets. With a .308, I use a moving target lead of 0.6 mils per mph of target movement perpendicular to the line of sight.
A slow walk is about 2 mph. A very fast walk is 4 mph.
Is that exact? No. You have to estimate the speed of the target. Human targets rarely move for very long at consistent speeds.
The target may not be moving perpendicularly to the line of sight. And you have to take the wind into consideration, increasing the lead by the wind hold if the target is moving into the wind, and decreasing it by the wind hold if the target is moving downwind.
(I do everything in mils - because I hold, and that's what the reticle is graduated in - so I use the wind formula for mils I posted previously.)
But for people who haven't shot movers very much - which is most people - it's a place to start.
People's brains work in different ways. What works for one person may not work for another.
My rule is to use what works for me.
For example - moving targets. With a .308, I use a moving target lead of 0.6 mils per mph of target movement perpendicular to the line of sight.
A slow walk is about 2 mph. A very fast walk is 4 mph.
Is that exact? No. You have to estimate the speed of the target. Human targets rarely move for very long at consistent speeds.
The target may not be moving perpendicularly to the line of sight. And you have to take the wind into consideration, increasing the lead by the wind hold if the target is moving into the wind, and decreasing it by the wind hold if the target is moving downwind.
(I do everything in mils - because I hold, and that's what the reticle is graduated in - so I use the wind formula for mils I posted previously.)
But for people who haven't shot movers very much - which is most people - it's a place to start.