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hi
in f class shooting prone, how do you deal with being forced to shoot in a boil? I know the answer would possible be dont shoot, but running out of time and you must send a round.
thx for the help!
As a physicist, I can't understand why the image would appear higher than it is. I know what it takes to cause this phenomenon, a density gradient, but can't postulate one that would exist in a boil but not in a light wind. --Jerry
As a physicist, I can't understand why the image would appear higher than it is. I know what it takes to cause this phenomenon, a density gradient, but can't postulate one that would exist in a boil but not in a light wind. --Jerry
I was discussing this yesterday with my shooting buddy. We were wondering if perhaps displacement is the result of repetitive/additive refractions in a boil. And perhaps when wind churned the air, the additive function did not occur.As a physicist, I can't understand why the image would appear higher than it is. I know what it takes to cause this phenomenon, a density gradient, but can't postulate one that would exist in a boil but not in a light wind. --Jerry
My thoughts for what they are worth and remember you read it on the internet.
I agree that a boil changes the location of the target image, but what I have found is that when the mirage disappears at 1000 yards shots go almost ½ MOA high. I'm not going to try to explain it, but I've seen it too many times with rifles that shoot tight. I've seen it really noticeable at Connaught, and at Laurel in MS. I picked up on it at Connaught, I noticed it 4 shots too late and it cost me a match at Laurel. (Craig Martin picked it up sooner than I did that day) Both ranges can and do go from soup to clear due to passing cloud cover. It's the opposite of conventional wisdom. (though it fits with the "lights up, sights up" mantra from sling shooting)
Shooting in a boil, if you don't you're likely going to have a harder time at Raton, because it's the easiest 30 seconds you're going to have in a relay. (note you can get a boil when the wind is blowing from 12 or 6 o'clock)
Many of the things we in F class learn about shooting at long range comes from sling shooters, they have been doing it longer, and some of those things may apply less to the way F class shooters shoot. In this case think that the time delay from making the read until you shoot has something to do with the "rule". Some sling shooters are fast, but even the fastest are probably not as fast as an average F class shooter getting from a spotting scope to breaking the shot, and definitely not as fast as a guy who uses his rifle scope to read wind. With that thought, when you see a boil it often means that there is a changing condition, as an F class shooter you can send one in what you see, but a sling shooter has to come out of the scope, and he doesn't know what's happening as he gets the rifle steady and breaks the shot so he can't see what he's shooting in. So there is a fair chance that if a sling shooter starts to shoot in a boil, by the time he breaks the shot it may not be boiling (going back to the idea that the boil marks a changing condition. When you think about it from that perspective it makes sense.
XTR is right-on in his comment. I shot service rifle many years, mainly on USAR rifle teams back in the 1980's using the M14/M1A, and we used the spotting scope to access what mirage was doing. The rule pounded into us by our coaches was "never shoot in a boil"...specifically because conditions could change while one was getting off the spotting scope and shouldering the rifle to make the shot. So that is the carry over rule that shooters often repeat. Later on, as a Palma shooter, I learned to keep my rifle shouldered and my non-shooting eye on the scope as the other eye was in aiming mode, so I found it a little less risky to shoot in a boil. But, as an F-Class shooter using a rifle scope and reading mirage from it, like others on this post have stated, I relish being presented with a "boil".
Dan Biggs