dcali
Bullet Maker
You're getting tripped up over the angular corrections vs the curvature of the trajectory. With the scope, you can make perfect angular corrections at any range - the line of sight is a straight line. So if you hit 3MOA lower than you want at any range, you dial exactly 3MOA to correct for it.
Now that your scope is pointing 3 MOA down from your first shot, you have to move the rifle up 3 MOA to hit the original target . You've now changed the angle of departure of the bullet, so the trajectory will be very slightly different - it's not a rigid rotation of the trajectory curve. So yes, there will be some error in your second shot. In practice, it's very small and ignorable. Maybe the guys who shoot at 4000 yards have to deal with it. I've never checked the math or shot anywhere near that far personally. But at 1000 it's not an issue.
Sometimes it helps to think about these issues by picturing extreme cases. Imagine a normal flat fire case, and then imagine aiming up at 88 degrees or something like that to hit the exact same impact point. Clearly, the scope adjustment in that case (88 degrees worth) has resulted in *no* impact change. If it were rigid, you'd see 88 degrees worth.
Now that your scope is pointing 3 MOA down from your first shot, you have to move the rifle up 3 MOA to hit the original target . You've now changed the angle of departure of the bullet, so the trajectory will be very slightly different - it's not a rigid rotation of the trajectory curve. So yes, there will be some error in your second shot. In practice, it's very small and ignorable. Maybe the guys who shoot at 4000 yards have to deal with it. I've never checked the math or shot anywhere near that far personally. But at 1000 it's not an issue.
Sometimes it helps to think about these issues by picturing extreme cases. Imagine a normal flat fire case, and then imagine aiming up at 88 degrees or something like that to hit the exact same impact point. Clearly, the scope adjustment in that case (88 degrees worth) has resulted in *no* impact change. If it were rigid, you'd see 88 degrees worth.