I have a repro Mosin sniper rifle (from Cabelas in PA). I have spent some time at the range (and online learning about how things work) getting it somewhat dialed in. Also working the trigger from over 8 pounds with a LOT of creep, down to just under 4 pounds with a small amount of creep.
But over the weekend, I took it down to Bang Steel range (review of Bang Steel course here - http://www.snipershide.com/shooting...eivew-bang-steel-long-range-rifle-course.html) while down there shooting my .308 again.
So I finalized the zero at 200 yards and then played some on the longer range steel. I started at 535 yards with the scope set to 5 on the elevation. Elevation was good, and then had to dial in some windage. It seems that the windage knob gradations are at 1/2 MOA per line. Got about a 3rd round hit.
Then stepped out to 600 yards. This time I had to tweek the elevation a bit, but got on the steel with a couple of rounds. And followed it up with two more hits.
Then for real fun, stepped out to 763 yards on a 12" square plate (about 1.5 MOA). It took about 3 - 4 rounds to get on target with a bit more windage and a tweek of elevation. But managed to bang the steel at 763 yards with a 1943 rifle.
I was shooting PPU 182 gr ammunition.
Great fun. Hardest part was finding the targets with a fixed 3.5x scope.
Much harder than with my .308 (Remington 700 PS-1, Manners T-4A with MCS, Vortex Viper PST 6-24 FFP, Timney trigger).
But over the weekend, I took it down to Bang Steel range (review of Bang Steel course here - http://www.snipershide.com/shooting...eivew-bang-steel-long-range-rifle-course.html) while down there shooting my .308 again.
So I finalized the zero at 200 yards and then played some on the longer range steel. I started at 535 yards with the scope set to 5 on the elevation. Elevation was good, and then had to dial in some windage. It seems that the windage knob gradations are at 1/2 MOA per line. Got about a 3rd round hit.
Then stepped out to 600 yards. This time I had to tweek the elevation a bit, but got on the steel with a couple of rounds. And followed it up with two more hits.
Then for real fun, stepped out to 763 yards on a 12" square plate (about 1.5 MOA). It took about 3 - 4 rounds to get on target with a bit more windage and a tweek of elevation. But managed to bang the steel at 763 yards with a 1943 rifle.
I was shooting PPU 182 gr ammunition.
Great fun. Hardest part was finding the targets with a fixed 3.5x scope.
Much harder than with my .308 (Remington 700 PS-1, Manners T-4A with MCS, Vortex Viper PST 6-24 FFP, Timney trigger).