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Hammer said:.
Under prairie dog town conditions with the rifles that are taken prairie dog shooting...
What is the longest distance that you will have a daily average hit rate of over 90% on prairie dogs ?
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dale metzger said:Have shot the rats for nearly 20 years.
A hit ratio that high, with typical prairie conditions, could only be accomplished at ranges slightly over 200 yards.
Much depends on equipment used, caliber, and the amount of trigger time the shooter has had on the prairie.
Hotshot said:What a downer from SDW!
On a hot spring time town where you get a lot of shots at 100 to 250 yards we often get 18 or 19 out of 20. We shoot 223 or 204 from the bench. Most misses would be a head shot, gust of wind, or stretching the distance.
Later in the year shooting a lot of 200 to over 400 yards with some wind, we take turns shooting 10 shots then spotting for 10 shots. 5 out of 10 is good. Sometimes we do a little better but often times not that well, especially beyond 350.
Set ups where we shoot out to 500 and more get real tough. We all get one occasionally but percentages are terrible. Some of our guys don't even try those.
I did 3 for 7 at 675 yards in May with my 20BR and that is exceptional in my world.
pdog said:Range is relative to conditions, equipment and experience. There is no one answer to this question.
SDWhirlwind said:Hammer said:.
Under prairie dog town conditions with the rifles that are taken prairie dog shooting...
What is the longest distance that you will have a daily average hit rate of over 90% on prairie dogs ?
.
It will be interesting to read the responses to this question! LOL Seeing as nobody has to or has anyway to 'prove' their percentage and with it being the internet and all my guess is a 15-20% 'fudging' of numbers.
Are 100% of the shots with an adult standing at attention? A lot more meat than a head shot or shoulder shot with one half way out of his hole or on all 4's grazing in the grass.
Wind? How much and constant or switching direction?
How fast and precise are you selecting targets? Meaning are you there to see how many you can kill or how many rounds you can shoot? How young/small are the pups or all adults? I ask this because you have 3-4 times the target size between when the young ones come out and an adult dog which will make a huge difference (well it does to me).
I have rarely ever heard or heard discussion of kill ratio to ammo spent! Most want to brag about how many hundred or even THOUSAND rounds they shoot in a day or trip! If you don't have the carcass to prove a hit what does a gut shot count? If you find blood that doesn't confirm a kill. Therefore are you shooting to just "hit" a pdog or kill him? If your primary goal is to "hit" them and secondary to kill them then that is a big difference.
Most here will disagree with me because it is ONLY a pdog so they and coyotes etc it doesn't matter how they die. Guess I am a bit twisted but don't find their life any different than any other animal, none of them deserve to suffer and you either kill them or stay home and watch Jackie Bushman on TV!
My worthless .02 cents worth! Let the bashing and exaggerated statistics begin.
Respectfully,
Dennis
