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  #1  
Old 01-06-2015, 10:17 AM
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BillyGoatCrawler BillyGoatCrawler is offline
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Default Analyzing wind drift with trigonometry explained.

So wind drift and the trigonometry behind it can be confusing for shooters that do not have a math background. I put this together to help depict the math behind the physics of wind drift. I put this together because when to use sin or cos can be confusing if you do not understand what is going on. Many people hear of cosine and think it should be used indiscriminately. But, using the incorrect trigonometric function will yield an incorrect result.

This is simply the physics of wind and vector components. In real life your projectile will most likely not experience one simple and steady wind on its path to the target. It will most likely experience a few vectors, so this is not an exact science all the way to impact, but this can clarify how wind angles truly affect a projectile.


The purpose of this to help new and interested shooters understand the subject, math, and the physics of wind drift. It is not a cure all approach to making a wind call, as a range will have many varying winds on the path down range.


Basically think of viewing yourself, the target, and the wind as a right triangle, as viewed from above. Remember back to the Pythagorean theorem and that a^2 + b^2 = c^2 (^2 means "squared")
Trigonometry uses angles to determine one of these components based off an angle within the triangle. In our case the angle will be in reference to the wind direction.

Now, think of that triangle being superimposed on a Cartesian coordinate system(x, y graph). Wind can be broken down into unit vectors. What this means is that the wind value affecting the x component can be calculated as well as the y component. Since only one of these values affect lateral drift, we only need to treat wind in regards to that, since that is the component of the wind that will affect our projectile.

As they say, a picture is worth 1000 words. So, here is 2000 more words consolidated into some images. Again, the take away of what we are doing is vector anaylsis to find the component that affects drift experienced by wind since this is a different value than a measured wind at an angle.



Now, you're creating a simple equation to solve for the component that affects left and right drift. Sin=opposite/hypotenuse so plug in these numbers and solve for the desired side. Basic formula if you're measuring the wind at your position:

(wind experienced)sin(angle of wind)=(wind value for hold) Use this wind value for your true hold.


If you're referencing wind with respect to the target, use this method:
Attached Images
File Type: jpg intro.jpg (83.8 KB, 1236 views)
File Type: jpg Sin.jpg (80.5 KB, 1174 views)
File Type: jpg cos.jpg (71.8 KB, 1137 views)
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Old 01-06-2015, 10:17 AM
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Reserved.
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Old 01-06-2015, 10:24 AM
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...and the anti-gun establishment thinks that we (gun enthusiasts) collectively have a 6th grade education.
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Old 01-06-2015, 11:03 AM
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Originally Posted by Delfuego View Post
...and the anti-gun establishment thinks that we (gun enthusiasts) collectively have a 6th grade education.
they got the numbers confused. it's an education to the sixth power, buy they can't perform scientific notation
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Old 01-06-2015, 11:12 AM
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Standish

Not to criticize but you should draw the last vector correctly with regard to the correction in angles.

Some may not be familiar with trig and not know that all your angle need to add up to 180˚ meaning the angle opposite your 30˚ vector = 60˚ and there fore has more of the available wind acting on the bullet

With the triangles all the same in your example people may not see the increase

an other way to look at it is to use a sail boat tack angle calculator for those that want to envision it.
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Old 01-06-2015, 11:20 AM
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Standish

Not to criticize but you should draw the last vector correctly with regard to the correction in angles.

Some may not be familiar with trig and not know that all your angle need to add up to 180˚ meaning the angle opposite your 30˚ vector = 60˚ and there fore has more of the available wind acting on the bullet

With the triangles all the same in your example people may not see the increase

an other way to look at it is to use a sail boat tack angle calculator for those that want to envision it.
I had thought of doing that. Using a 30/60/90 triangle throughout, but if I used 30 in the sin function and 60 in the cosine function they would have both equaled 5 and that might have been confusing. I wanted to illustrate the fact that the same angle at different vectors require different trig functions and will result in different holds.

If I used a 30/60/90 triangle and kept the angles the same throughout, we would work with all the same numbers and that would be even more confusing. I left out the complimentary angles to stream line the image by keeping angles that are not directly relevant out and to keep it less confusing for those who are not used to looking at more clutter.


Edit: Corrected vector error. Thanks for catching that. I made these quickly.
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Old 01-06-2015, 12:09 PM
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the thing is I'm a 42 year old Toolmaker that hit trade school right out of High school and you should see the look on people face when you tell them that a 10 mph wind @ 45˚ is not half value it's .7 or .707% if you want to be that precise

if you want to see a grown man cock his head and wrinkle his lip tell him that.

just take that wind angle and look up the Sin x your wind speed and done.
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Old 01-06-2015, 12:20 PM
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the thing is I'm a 42 year old Toolmaker that hit trade school right out of High school and you should see the look on people face when you tell them that a 10 mph wind @ 45˚ is not half value it's .7 or .707% if you want to be that precise

if you want to see a grown man cock his head and wrinkle his lip tell him that.

just take that wind angle and look up the Sin x your wind speed and done.
I know exactly what you mean. That is why I wanted to explain that this is actually dealing with vector analysis. It helps to explain why exactly we are getting approximately 70.7% of the perceived value of wind at a 45˚ angle. The math behind sin and cos, their opposite relations, and their parent graphs is very interesting. But the application is where the rubber meets the road.

As you said, just taking (windspeed)(sin(angle)) and done is easy if you're in a constant wind, I wanted to break it down so people could see what is happening with the whole representation.

Plus, if one is truly interested in shooting long range consistantly, then they are really just interested in physics. And this is a basic principle of physics. That may clear up some of the cos errors I see. I see lots of people using cos in place of where sin should be used. They're opposite functions.

In a right triangle, the sin of an angle is equal to the cos of it's complimentary angle.
sin30=cos60
sin45=cos45
sin60=cos30


Plus, the Long Range sub forum is lacking stickies. Maybe this one can be stickied to help answer common questions.
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Old 01-06-2015, 12:28 PM
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Standish I think you did a great job. My mind works a little different then most, so yeah a visual aid is helpful, Me I've been doing trig for 25 years I can do the most common stuff in my head. But I've also used trig everyday on the job so it comes pretty easy for me.

Now if we got into Calculous Screw that. I'm done

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Old 01-06-2015, 2:21 PM
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I just came from Sac Valley off the 1,000 yard range. Wind reading is an art, not a science. The ONLY way to learn it is to do it over and over. Wind velocities and angles are not constant. Over each 100 yard segment of a 1,000 yard range, the wind can be doing something different. That is at least 10 different variations that affect the flight of the bullet. Sometimes the wind at one end of a range is blowing left to right and at the other end of the range it is just the opposite. Or the true wind is blowing in one direction and the apparent mirage is going the opposite way. The ONLY way to begin to learn about it is to shoot in it!!!!!!!!
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Old 01-06-2015, 2:26 PM
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Default Analyzing wind drift with trigonometry explained.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ahhnother8 View Post
I just came from Sac Valley off the 1,000 yard range. Wind reading is an art, not a science. The ONLY way to learn it is to do it over and over. Wind velocities and angles are not constant. Over each 100 yard segment of a 1,000 yard range, the wind can be doing something different. That is at least 10 different variations that affect the flight of the bullet. Sometimes the wind at one end of a range is blowing left to right and at the other end of the range it is just the opposite. Or the true wind is blowing in one direction and the apparent mirage is going the opposite way. The ONLY way to begin to learn about it is to shoot in it!!!!!!!!

While I mostly agree. I am trying to be productive and offer insight into the workings of LR shooting. Simply saying its an art and cannot be explained to any degree is not helpful. Many approach the topic with the clock system and judge full value and half value. Obviously that's even worse off.
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Old 01-06-2015, 3:36 PM
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Default Analyzing wind drift with trigonometry explained.

Ops I miss read the title.. It wasn't about reading the wind, but the math behind the drift values. Good OP regardless
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Old 01-06-2015, 4:33 PM
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Originally Posted by Ahhnother8 View Post
I just came from Sac Valley off the 1,000 yard range. Wind reading is an art, not a science. The ONLY way to learn it is to do it over and over. Wind velocities and angles are not constant. Over each 100 yard segment of a 1,000 yard range, the wind can be doing something different. That is at least 10 different variations that affect the flight of the bullet. Sometimes the wind at one end of a range is blowing left to right and at the other end of the range it is just the opposite. Or the true wind is blowing in one direction and the apparent mirage is going the opposite way. The ONLY way to begin to learn about it is to shoot in it!!!!!!!!
Incorrect.

An Art is doing something that can't be Quantified, calculated, or measured. Wind speed even broken down to the minutest increment can be measured and factored in to the firing solution.

Now there are people out there that make it look easy and that to me is an art.

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Old 01-06-2015, 5:59 PM
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Incorrect.

An Art is doing something that can be Quantified, calculated, or measured. Wind speed even broken down to the minutest increment can be measured and factored in to the firing solution.

Now there are people out there that make it look easy and that to me is an art.
Wait!! I thought SCIENCE is applied to things that can be quantified, calculated, or measured. ART is more nebulous. Things that cannot be quantified, calculated, or measured and is in the eye of the beholder (windreader). I disagree that wind can be broken down to the minutest increment and measured and factored into a firing solution. A number of people have shown up at matches over the years with their wizzbang wind reader thingys, charts, graphs, and .30+ caliber Superloudenboomeners and still get their @$$ whipped by those who can actually read the wind.

We shoot with quite a few of the top long range shooters in the nation and it is rarely made to look easy. It always comes back to: the only way to learn it is to do it. We have hosted two advanced long range shooting clinics in the last two years. I post invites on this and other forums to come out and shoot, but most would rather not leave the safety of the keyboard.

A couple of people posting in the long range forum have been out to shoot and I would like to hear their interpretation of wind reading.
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Old 01-06-2015, 7:16 PM
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Originally Posted by Ahhnother8 View Post
Wait!! I thought SCIENCE is applied to things that can be quantified, calculated, or measured. ART is more nebulous. Things that cannot be quantified, calculated, or measured and is in the eye of the beholder (windreader). I disagree that wind can be broken down to the minutest increment and measured and factored into a firing solution. A number of people have shown up at matches over the years with their wizzbang wind reader thingys, charts, graphs, and .30+ caliber Superloudenboomeners and still get their @$$ whipped by those who can actually read the wind.

We shoot with quite a few of the top long range shooters in the nation and it is rarely made to look easy. It always comes back to: the only way to learn it is to do it. We have hosted two advanced long range shooting clinics in the last two years. I post invites on this and other forums to come out and shoot, but most would rather not leave the safety of the keyboard.

A couple of people posting in the long range forum have been out to shoot and I would like to hear their interpretation of wind reading.
Maybe there is a reason people don't want to shoot with you? Personally, I'd rather shoot in the national forest among friends than join the pissing contest that keeps popping up on these threads. If you want to post about your matches, make a thread. If you want to make a post about the art of wind reading, make a thread. If you want to discuss the math and trigonometry behind wind values at different angles then you're in the right place.
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Old 01-06-2015, 7:35 PM
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A very useful post for shooters to learn the basics of wind deflection.

Now you just have to explain how to dope the wind when you look down the 1,000 yard range and the range flags are pointing in four different directions.
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Old 01-06-2015, 7:48 PM
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Originally Posted by Ahhnother8 View Post
Wait!! I thought SCIENCE is applied to things that can be quantified, calculated, or measured. ART is more nebulous. Things that cannot be quantified, calculated, or measured and is in the eye of the beholder (windreader). I disagree that wind can be broken down to the minutest increment and measured and factored into a firing solution. A number of people have shown up at matches over the years with their wizzbang wind reader thingys, charts, graphs, and .30+ caliber Superloudenboomeners and still get their @$$ whipped by those who can actually read the wind.

We shoot with quite a few of the top long range shooters in the nation and it is rarely made to look easy. It always comes back to: the only way to learn it is to do it. We have hosted two advanced long range shooting clinics in the last two years. I post invites on this and other forums to come out and shoot, but most would rather not leave the safety of the keyboard.

A couple of people posting in the long range forum have been out to shoot and I would like to hear their interpretation of wind reading.
Typo, sorry, corrected now

As for your pedigree I really don't care. I don't care who you are, what you say you can do, or who your friends are. it means nothing on a web board. if you want respect don't tell me what you can do SHOW ME.

I've shot with some very talented people and trust me standing in their shadow, yeah they make it look easy. I said look easy. not that it was easy just that at a certain level of skill your confidence grows to the point that you look at a problem unflustered. because you've already done it.

As per the scientific side of this if you had a gizmo that had an anemometer array that feed back info to a lap top and gave real time windage updates yeah it can be plotted, recorded, and the best solution applied to the dope.
and what I mean by array is a row of them laid out on the firing line every 25 meters sending data back for a constantly changing wind call.
then you just need to dial in your wind and try to pull the trigger when conditions match what you dialed in. then it's all about the timing of the shot. You wind call can be precise but if you do not match the conditions to the moment you pull the trigger it's all for not.

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Old 01-06-2015, 7:49 PM
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Originally Posted by kcstott View Post
the thing is I'm a 42 year old Toolmaker that hit trade school right out of High school and you should see the look on people face when you tell them that a 10 mph wind @ 45˚ is not half value it's .7 or .707% if you want to be that precise

if you want to see a grown man cock his head and wrinkle his lip tell him that.

just take that wind angle and look up the Sin x your wind speed and done.
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Old 01-06-2015, 8:15 PM
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Maybe a separate thread on mirage angles, boils, dialing back, vegetation, dust, terrain features, wind shadows, low position mirage VRS elevated, gravity distance.... The stuff really doesn't end. But at the end of the day, wasn't the op trying to give a mathematical formula for one only one read angle?

I don't think it was meant (I could be wrong) on how to read the wind.


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Old 01-06-2015, 8:18 PM
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Originally Posted by Ahhnother8 View Post
Wait!! I thought SCIENCE is applied to things that can be quantified, calculated, or measured. ART is more nebulous. Things that cannot be quantified, calculated, or measured and is in the eye of the beholder (windreader). I disagree that wind can be broken down to the minutest increment and measured and factored into a firing solution. A number of people have shown up at matches over the years with their wizzbang wind reader thingys, charts, graphs, and .30+ caliber Superloudenboomeners and still get their @$$ whipped by those who can actually read the wind.

We shoot with quite a few of the top long range shooters in the nation and it is rarely made to look easy. It always comes back to: the only way to learn it is to do it. We have hosted two advanced long range shooting clinics in the last two years. I post invites on this and other forums to come out and shoot, but most would rather not leave the safety of the keyboard.

A couple of people posting in the long range forum have been out to shoot and I would like to hear their interpretation of wind reading.
Maybe we can get a thread about the art of piss drift during pissing competitions?
OP never spoke of how to read the wind. He posted on its effects.
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Old 01-12-2015, 8:35 AM
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if you want respect don't tell me what you can do SHOW ME.
I have a little bit of experience in shooting in the wind and would be glad to help anyone who REALLY wants to learn how. What do you have in mind?
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Old 01-12-2015, 4:25 PM
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Old 01-12-2015, 5:57 PM
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pretty much.... right??
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Old 01-12-2015, 6:05 PM
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pretty much.... right??
Yeah...?Ahhnother8 always has a chance,but was beat by a woman yesterday.
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Old 01-13-2015, 8:22 PM
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We were up at Ojai, playing with a little "mini clinic" where we all sat around calling wind and a hard holder put on the dope and took the shot. It was interesting to see how different people read wind and it was telling to notice how much the geography of a range effects the wind.

Ultimately fluid dynamics is a thing we can only sort of model, and as an anemometer array along the flighpath would be a nearly perfect macro example of heisenberg's uncertainty principle I doubt we could ever really measure the wind. Doesn't mean we can't get close though.

That closeness is the art. It's the soccer player's bicycle kick at half field into the top corner of the goal. Yes there is science behind it, or at least science can explain it, but the skill has transcended conscious thought and become a gut feeling. The internalizing of a practice, to the end that it becomes just another thing you do is absolutely ART. But I, like others don't get on the range nearly enough to do this, so while I'm at work and wish I could be shooting I'll read whatever I can in hopes that I can maximize my actual trigger time. And then I will go to Coalinga for regionals, and I too will get beaten by a woman.
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Old 01-13-2015, 9:12 PM
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I have a little bit of experience in shooting in the wind and would be glad to help anyone who REALLY wants to learn how. What do you have in mind?
If this is a real offer then where do I show up? Every time I'm at Coalinga I estimate too much wind at 300 and too little at 600, and then mirage shifts and I have no idea how to recalculate. I do a lot of hope, walk it in and surf it as long as I can. NOT a good way to shoot at Coalinga.

Johnny called me after shooting with highpower790 up there, and he was in an excited panic. Total paraphrasing "I was scoring for him, and he just wasn't shooting. Everyone else was shooting 8s and wide 9s and he was just sitting there. Then he looked behind us then he started shooting and he nailed an x! I waited for him to be on the gun before I looked behind me and all that was back there was the smoke stack and the trees. And then I realized it was the ****ing smokestack and the trees!!! Sneaky sneaky!"

I have so much to learn.
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Old 01-14-2015, 3:15 PM
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Originally Posted by milotrain View Post
Ultimately fluid dynamics is a thing we can only sort of model, and as an anemometer array along the flighpath would be a nearly perfect macro example of heisenberg's uncertainty principle I doubt we could ever really measure the wind.
No, that isn't how Heisenberg works. It would, however, be a real life example of chaotic systems.
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Old 01-14-2015, 3:19 PM
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I know that's not how Heisenberg's uncertainty principle works fundamentally. The macroscopic case of that principle is that you cannot measure something without influencing it (or at least that's what I was taught, ). This is a perfect example of that even if it's not correct
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Old 01-17-2015, 7:23 AM
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If this is a real offer then where do I show up? Every time I'm at Coalinga I estimate too much wind at 300 and too little at 600, and then mirage shifts and I have no idea how to recalculate. I do a lot of hope, walk it in and surf it as long as I can. NOT a good way to shoot at Coalinga.
Of course the offer is real, but in order not to derail a thread on theoretical wind drift, I will PM you information on when/where to get help with real world wind drift, when shooting long-range. Shooting in Coalinga is a challenge and a hoot!! If you can be successful there and/or Sac Valley, you can be successful at most any range in the world.

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Old 01-17-2015, 9:40 AM
kcstott kcstott is offline
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Old 01-17-2015, 10:02 AM
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So much ego in this thread. The point was missed completely. I regret ever posting.
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Old 01-23-2015, 10:04 PM
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if you are simply talking math, then yes, this is helpful. but....its overly simplified and if a novice shooter uses this, it will, IMO, not help him read wind.

ahhhnother8 has it right, its an art, not a science. i cannot begin to explain how he shoots so consistent (i've been in a few local matches where he was shooting) other than he is a master of his craft, knows his equipment, and most of all, knows how to read the wind. there is no time to calculate anything on paper. even if you did, by the time you finished calculating it, the conditions changed.

i shoot with a high magnification optic, heavy 20+lb gun, and front rest and he shoots a palma rifle with iron sights, slung up and he still shoots a higher point score

there are a few people i would listen to, and he is one of the few guys that when he talks/writes, i listen. not trying to defend him...he doesn't need it....his scores and record says it all.

Last edited by bsumoba; 01-23-2015 at 10:08 PM..
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Old 01-24-2015, 6:07 PM
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Let me say it again... This is about how wind effects projectiles. This is not how to read the wind.

I'll probably have to go ahead and say that again in a few more posts.
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Last edited by BillyGoatCrawler; 01-25-2015 at 9:02 AM.. Reason: grammar
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Old 01-28-2015, 7:11 PM
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I must have a knack for picking the thread with all the pissing matches. I'm just trying to learn some things about long distance shooting, as I am a novice when it comes to shooting outside of 400 yds. Thanks to everyone that left useful info.
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Old 01-28-2015, 8:00 PM
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I must have a knack for picking the thread with all the pissing matches. I'm just trying to learn some things about long distance shooting, as I am a novice when it comes to shooting outside of 400 yds. Thanks to everyone that left useful info.

Look up snipers hide, accurate shooter and long range hunter. The Hide was a bit better before it was ported to scout, but there are a few real deal guys (snipers, trainers etc) there. Of course, just like here there are also keyboard experts.
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Old 01-31-2015, 4:55 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 5gnut View Post
I must have a knack for picking the thread with all the pissing matches. I'm just trying to learn some things about long distance shooting, as I am a novice when it comes to shooting outside of 400 yds. Thanks to everyone that left useful info.
Just go out and do it.
Walk them in and pay attention to what the wind is doing to the group then write it down. Go in the afternoons when the wind is up.
The wind is pushing you at 400 as well.
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