Range Report cant angle

Re: cant angle

You may be confusing the sight setting required to compensate for the cant with what happens to the point of impact.

When you cant the rifle, your elevation setting will decrease, but the lower point of impact will be compensated for by a windage increase.

Let's say, for example, that your rifle requires a sight setting of 12.1 mils elevation for a 1000-yard shot in a no-windage situation.

Rotate the rifle 90 degrees, and you will need about 1.2 mils of elevation setting, and 13.2 mils of windage setting, to compensate for the fact that your elevation is now actually your windage and your windage knob is your elevation, which doesn't have a 100-yard zero on it.

Rather than get wrapped around how that works, my recommendation is don't cant the rifle...
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Re: cant angle

well i haven't had the chance to try it again but i was curious shouldn't the drop still be a little more and just the scope adjustment be where what you described? when i have a chance to do it again maybe ill find out but drop and MOA adj are two different categories.
 
Re: cant angle

Lindy could not be more right!
Years ago I ran the Practical Rifle course at Ft. Mead ,Maryland. I would set up the range where the shooter HAD to shoot from behind a tree fell that caused the shooter to take an abnormal cant of the rifle. It was a timed leg and all shooters had to 'Kentucky windage' the fall of shot. It was fun to see the guys really try to figure out the hold.
How many times have you seen other shooters cant a rifle and then bitch about their scores?LOL. We are our own worst enemies.