<span style="font-weight: bold">Background</span>: two weeks ago I had the chance to attend a great Beginner Intermediate precision rifle class given by BHTC. Before that I had a little experience with shooting 1,000yds modified f-class at Qauntico and even a rare tact match. Before now my scope served me well (Konus M30 6-25x).
The class showed me that for tactical shooting I may need to look for specific features my scope didn't offer: Ie; a scope with mil/mil vs my mil/moa, I also learned I prefer a reticle with hash lines with smaller increments for ranging instead of the normal mil dots.
<span style="font-weight: bold">Problem</span>: The main set back I had was my 1/8 adjustments. Upon going from one target to the next with distances varying from 300 to 800 to 550 to 1, 000 keeping track of where I was on the turret became a battle. Especially during nightfire where actually seeing the numbers on the turret just wasn't an option. Can you imagine trying to count the amount of clicks I had to dial in to get to 450yards..LOL
<span style="font-weight: bold">Question</span>: until I upgrade my scope would it be wise to get into the habit of zeroing my rifle at say.. 300 yards whenever I plan on shooting a class or match where the distances vary. Would that alleviate some of the excessive dialing? Does anyone use this practice and have success with it? Did you run into any problems doing this?
Thanks for reading, and any feedback.
The class showed me that for tactical shooting I may need to look for specific features my scope didn't offer: Ie; a scope with mil/mil vs my mil/moa, I also learned I prefer a reticle with hash lines with smaller increments for ranging instead of the normal mil dots.
<span style="font-weight: bold">Problem</span>: The main set back I had was my 1/8 adjustments. Upon going from one target to the next with distances varying from 300 to 800 to 550 to 1, 000 keeping track of where I was on the turret became a battle. Especially during nightfire where actually seeing the numbers on the turret just wasn't an option. Can you imagine trying to count the amount of clicks I had to dial in to get to 450yards..LOL
<span style="font-weight: bold">Question</span>: until I upgrade my scope would it be wise to get into the habit of zeroing my rifle at say.. 300 yards whenever I plan on shooting a class or match where the distances vary. Would that alleviate some of the excessive dialing? Does anyone use this practice and have success with it? Did you run into any problems doing this?
Thanks for reading, and any feedback.