M
Montana Pete
Guest
I got some advice on this forum recently, and one important recommendation was to use one or more wind flags.
Yesterday I shot at the range mostly at 100 yds, and had one homemade wind flag, which was half a broomstick with a 30 inch strip of yellow tape stuck to the top. The wind varied from about 5 to 15 mph., mainly from 3 o'clock but with occasional veering around the compass. I put the flag halfway to the target -- 50 yds out.
Here are some problems I encountered due to my lack of knowledge of what I was doing:
1. I could not see the flag and the target at the same time, since my 18X scope has a narrow field. By the time I decided to shoot, a couple of seconds were lost turning my eye back to the scope.
2. Time needed to fire-- Once the flag looked good, I began my trigger squeeze. I usually take about 15 seconds to squeeze off to get the necessary surprise break. By then, the wind might have changed.
3. The flag was either (a) stuck out to the left, (b) sagging as the wind diminished, or (c) veering around the compass indecisively in shifting wind. Which would be the best situation to actually fire the shot?
4. Do you try to hold off for the wind, or just keep your target quartered by the crosshairs? I did the latter, trying to shoot at the calmest point, but the next time I may just vary my hold-off in terms of the wind. So if the wind is stronger blowing toward the right, I would just hold off farther to the left. If the wind is momentarily calm, I would hold dead on. Worth a try, I suppose.
Did the flag help my shooting? Well, you would have to know how I and the rifle normally shoot, but my five 5-shot groups would have averaged under 1 MOA, and out of the five groups I got two that were 0.75 inch. My single 200 yd group was about 2.2 inch. For me this is pretty decent. I did not get any really outstanding group, I think due to the shifting wind.
Yesterday I shot at the range mostly at 100 yds, and had one homemade wind flag, which was half a broomstick with a 30 inch strip of yellow tape stuck to the top. The wind varied from about 5 to 15 mph., mainly from 3 o'clock but with occasional veering around the compass. I put the flag halfway to the target -- 50 yds out.
Here are some problems I encountered due to my lack of knowledge of what I was doing:
1. I could not see the flag and the target at the same time, since my 18X scope has a narrow field. By the time I decided to shoot, a couple of seconds were lost turning my eye back to the scope.
2. Time needed to fire-- Once the flag looked good, I began my trigger squeeze. I usually take about 15 seconds to squeeze off to get the necessary surprise break. By then, the wind might have changed.
3. The flag was either (a) stuck out to the left, (b) sagging as the wind diminished, or (c) veering around the compass indecisively in shifting wind. Which would be the best situation to actually fire the shot?
4. Do you try to hold off for the wind, or just keep your target quartered by the crosshairs? I did the latter, trying to shoot at the calmest point, but the next time I may just vary my hold-off in terms of the wind. So if the wind is stronger blowing toward the right, I would just hold off farther to the left. If the wind is momentarily calm, I would hold dead on. Worth a try, I suppose.
Did the flag help my shooting? Well, you would have to know how I and the rifle normally shoot, but my five 5-shot groups would have averaged under 1 MOA, and out of the five groups I got two that were 0.75 inch. My single 200 yd group was about 2.2 inch. For me this is pretty decent. I did not get any really outstanding group, I think due to the shifting wind.