Re: wind doping
Reading the wind at 3/4 range to target has produced good results for many years. That is hard enough and only achievable through experience, and careful, structured shot procedures and data book study.
Print up some data cards for your caliber from JBM at a 10 MPH full value wind. Im of the mindset that that combination will do you well for just about everything with a little bit of brain work on your part. If its a 5 mph wind at full value, divide the above answer by 2. If its a 2-3 mph full value divide the answer above by 4. If its a 10 mph at quarter value, divide the answer by 4 and you have it.
Its all about mindset, dicipline and stucture when you go to the range. Its very easy to start off structured, but with a little time behind the gun it can be easy to loose track of why your there and just start putting rounds down range without documenting your calls, plots, and wind readings.Remember, its not how many rounds down range you put, its about quality rounds down range with a specific purpose. In this case its building your wind reading skills.
Study up on the information here. Study the effects of temperature, and wind on the mirage.
Study up on the affect the wind has on surrounding objects in your area. LL had a good post earlier outlining this.
If you have a Kestrel, use it @ your firing position. Take a guess of wind velocity and direction by using the affect the wind has on the surroundings @ your firing position and then compare it to the readings your Kestrel gives you. You dont even need to be at the range to do this.(Make sure you make your guess BEFORE you look at the kestrel lol).
Take your spotting scope to the range, back the focus off to the 3/4 range and watch the mirage. Study it. Learn it. practice reading it. It will be more difficult at different temperatures and wind speeds, but when that shot needs to break, you need to be able to make that wind call accurately regardless of the environment. Read the mirage, and observe the surrounding objects in that area. Make a comparison between the two and make a call.
Document everything in your data book. A call/shot undocumented is a round wasted and information lost. Read the wind, both speed and direction, make your adjustment, apply the fundamentals, take your shot, apply proper followthrough, CALL YOUR SHOT, document your hit, ANALIZE your wind call, adjustment taken, fundamentals, shot call and your impact. Make the proper adjustment and do it again.
Only through the above steps taken over and over again will your wind reading skills begin to develop.
Once you are able to read the wind accurately with your spotting scope, move to your wind reading with the scope on your rifle without dialing it back to 3/4 range. This is difficult to do, but can be done and in my mind is the only realistic way it should be done. Keep your scope focused on target, use "off center vision" to observe the mirage. Observe the affects on the environment through your rifle scope, make your wind call, adjustment, apply the fundamentals, make your shot, call your shot, observe your impact, if the shot was not at the desired location, immediately conduct a followup shot on target using the proper hold, and observe your shot impact, all without disturbing your position and NPA. Then document it.
Once at home, you can sit down and analize your data book. This is of course the main purpose of the data book.
1. Analize the shooter/bullet/rifle performance under different weather conditions.
IMO the above stated precedure is a sure fire way to improve your wind reading skills and through many rounds fired with that particular rifle, scope, bullet combination, you will find that the time it takes you to do the above stated procedure will decrease dramatically, and will be able to be accomplished in a matter of seconds or less behind the rifle.
Hope that helps.
(EDIT.......apparently LL was typing the same time I was, so as to clarify, LL is exactly right on all counts. My post was directed at firing on a square range and relatively flat, and the starts of learning to read the wind based on mirage and the affects the wind has on the surrounding terrain/environment.
Shooting on a 360 degree range, with canyons, draws, hills, brings about an entirely different set of problems needing to be solved in order to put rounds on target. That being said........the reading of the mirage accurately, and the method for obsevation of the wind on terrain, doesnt change, only the distances in which you take your readings and the procedures taken afterwards.