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I do when I go to Rayner's range.How many of you are shooting 5-6” plates at 500-600 yds?
I know the saying "aim small miss small" but cant you learn useful info by shooting at larger freshly painted steel targets especially in high wind situations. With small targets it feels awesome when all of the hours of work and practice are rewarded with an impact, however with a miss on a small target you never know by how much. On a larger target you know exactly how you "missed" and how to correct.
I have only shot 2 600 yd matches and you are correct at how challenging they are. I never placed well however my best 5 shots measured 1.57" in a benchrest match with a 6 dasher. What I didn't like about the match was you didn't know where your impacts were till 15-20 minutes later after the target was scored. With large steel at distance you get feedback 1-2 seconds after the shot is fired and observations on wind and mirage and dope can be analyzed in real time.That's why every now and then I go to NRA 600 yard prone matches and shoot in F-TR. This target is 3 ft across at 600 yards (6 MOA) but it tells you shitloads more about your shooting ability than any steel plate, of any size, at any distance:
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NRA prone shooting is not at all like benchrestWhat I didn't like about the match was you didn't know where your impacts were till 15-20 minutes later after the target was scored. With large steel at distance you get feedback 1-2 seconds after the shot is fired and observations on wind and mirage and dope can be analyzed in real time.
NRA prone shooting is not at all like benchrest
NRA mid range and long range matches are all fired with only one round in the gun and you get feedback within 5 - 10 seconds of your shot if shooting on paper targets or instantaneously if shooting on electronic targets.
Paper targets are lowered as soon as the operator sees a round impact the berm behind then marked with spotting disks showing the actual bullet hole and (with a disk at pre-determined positions on the outer edge of the target) the value of the shot.
Electronic targets use calibrated microphones and software to triangulate the bullet's location as it pierces the target then display the entire string in real time
The people who only shoot steel have no idea of the amount of feedback and data they are leaving behind.
If you want to see something amazing watch Bryan Litz (Berger Bullet's ballistician) pounding the 1 MOA X ring of the 800 yard long range target with only a sling and a shooting coat for rifle support and metallic aperture sights (no optics).
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... but cant you learn useful info by shooting at larger freshly painted steel targets especially in high wind situations. With small targets it feels awesome when all of the hours of work and practice are rewarded with an impact, however with a miss on a small target you never know by how much.
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... people who only shoot steel have no idea of the amount of feedback and data they are leaving behind ...
Glass envy !!!!Let's talk about 750yds ... at 750yds I am shooting IPSC(2/3) which is a 6x6 "face" on top and a 12x18 inch "body" on the bottom.
I won't say I can see every miss, because high shots are hitting in a tree line ... though even those I can see most of ... and if I am short or to the left or right I can see. And that's either in the day time or at night with thermal (have to heat the steel). In fact, with the thermal, I can see the trace and the hits and the misses.
Further, in most conditions I can see the splotches on the target when I hit. I paint the targets after each session, so I have a fresh surface to see the splotches of the hits against.
So, I can see 90% of my misses day or night and about 80% of the time, I can see the splotches of the hits on the target, showing me exactly where on the target I hit.
Now I'm an olde man, so you youngsters should have a much easier time of seeing these things than I do !!
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Summer, clear conditions ... can see the splotches on the targets in these conditions. And can see most misses, though high misses are harder due to the tree line ... but I can still usually see them, since even when I miss I only miss by an inch or so, I I am looking near the right spot. And high misses are rare anyway, the vast majority of misses are wind misses to the left or right.
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Another summer shot ...
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In the rain, it is definitely harder to see the misses and the splotches of the hits ... though I can still see most shorts, lefts and rights, but but not overs or the splotches. With 5.56 sometimes can't hear or even see the hits. But with 6.5 or 7.62 I can. The thickness of your targets needs to be aligned with the calibers you are shooting, there is no "one size fits all" for steel.
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... Glass envy !!!
Thermal clipon contraption envy as well. What rides on top of the scope?Well, in the above pics, shown are NF 7-35x T3 and L&S Mk6 3-18x T3 ... but I also used a B-XTR2 3-15x SCR-MIL ... about a $900 scope these days ... The burris is just not as good at no-dial shooting if there is much wind. I can interpolate up to about a 2 mil hold, which is about right for 8-10 MPH wind at 750yds. But that's the limit.
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This day it was raining, so tougher to see. Using the 5.56(18) with Black Hills 77gr TMK. Here's the 5.56(18) with the XTR2 3-15x ... much as it was in the field above, though without the thermal clipon contraption shown up front.
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... What rides on top of the scope? ...