Matt1911
Cyrwus Jr.
I'm married with kids.. what's it like to get out more often?mike cyrwus said:if you cant tell he's bullshitting you then get out more often.
I'm married with kids.. what's it like to get out more often?mike cyrwus said:if you cant tell he's bullshitting you then get out more often.
Short answer yes.R.Pullicar.jr said:I was lost by post number 2. I just checked my zero today after verifying a new load over the chrono I shot offhand at 10 yards. After switching from coated to plated bullets my POI was about 3 inches right and 2 inches high. Made corrections shot some more. From my limited experience inside 30-35 yards bullet drop or rise is negligible but I still need lots of practice. Has anyone else noticed a big shift in POI when switching from one bullet to another?
This is exactly correct. With my USPSA 147 grain loads my 9Pro hits spot on at 7 yds and spot on at 50 yds. I stumbled upon this by complete accident at the time because I'd likely never bother to check it at 50. When I discovered this I was checking to see if my bullets would tumble and if they aren't tumbling at 50 they probably aren't going to. At 25 I'm several inches high so I have a center aim up close (as if it really mattered), "low" aim at 15 and a full 6 o'clock aim at 25-30 on steel plates. Check with the loads you are going to shoot, 124 grain loads aren't near as bad.technetium-99m said:25-30 yards is far enough away that you can be confident of your zero for any shot in a practical shooting match. Every so often you will have a popper at 50 yards or a small plate at 20 yards. It makes sense to me to verify where the gun hits at similar distances so I know the bullet will hit at the top of the front sight. It's more about getting verification at distance than verifying trajectory.