B
On bad wind days at Sacramento which is most of the year we have the pit boss walk the line while each shooter puts one on the paper.This gives you 20sets of eyes in the pits looking for the impact and only 1 shooter firing at a time.
It is better than everybody asking to have there target pulled at the same time over the radio.
Lynn aka Waterboy
Jeffrey -- well, whatever works. 36 inches seems quite extreme.
I prefer the program at
http://www.jbmballistics.com/~jbm/cgi-bin/jbmtraj_simp-5.0.cgi
and to use a 1,000 yard zero, then read off how high you'll be at 100 yards.
Be sure to fill out the scope height portion -- the scope on my HG is 5 inches above the bore, and that does make a difference.
For a .308 caliber, using a bullet of 190 grains at 3,000 fps with a B.C. of .500, you're *about* 27 inches high at 100 yards. For a 6mm, a 105 at 3,100 with a B.C. of .520, *about* 25.0.
The high-velocity magnums with a high B.C bullet can run as little as 22 inches high at 100 yards.
* * *
for the present 308 Win. (Next week the 6 BR gets here). My velocity is only 2754 and the bullet is 175 SMK. So all in all not a very good rifle for the distance. I agree that better bullets going faster will have less elevation at 100 yds.
Jeffrey Tooker