I totally agree, functionality and practically the distance doesn’t matter as long as you read your 100yrd groups correctly and have chronograph data to back it up.
I’m not trying to argue with anyone, bad mouth a proven process or discount anyone’s process but for new shooters/reloaders, even older shooters/reloaders the process that Ryan came up with works every time without a doubt.
I’ve tried the 100 stuff to start out with and it worked but why work hard at something that you can change to make it easier to decipher. 100 yard stuff CAN be a mess, you CAN come up with something but you test it out farther and it falls apart, why not do a little load development at the actual range you intend on shooting to, practice at those distances to get used to the environmentals and to get used to reading those environmental changes?
Give Ryan’s video a watch and keep an open mind of what he’s saying and telling people. I’m not saying anyone is wrong with their process, some don’t have access to land like I do but if I can improve on something and it works time and time again and is easy I don’t mind sharing for new guys to learn, choose what works for them in their situation.
I included a 300yrd target from my prc......there’s holes there that if I was at 100 yards there would be no way to tell what is what with .5g increments to boot, barely could at 300, so I moved to 650.
Some of you are WAY better at reading 100 yard targets than me, great, keep up the excellent work and keep doing what works for you!
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