Ok... this is a dumb question, but I am going to ask it anyway.
For those of you who live in areas where wind is just a daily part of life, I wanted to hear your feedback. I am in San Antonio and finding a day/time with no wind (which is rare in the first place) and then having that synch up with a time that I can actually get out and get a no wind zero, is.. problematic.
I am shooting f-class and prefer to hold-off shoot rather than clicking L/R several times a match. In the interest of consistency, I would like to get a true no wind zero and use that instead of making due with my last adjustment and holding off based on that (that last part made more sense in my head).
I fully realize that even if one were to get a perfect "no wind" zero at say 100 yards, etc... that due to spin drift and other factors shooting at another distance (say 1000 yards) would require a different "no wind" L/R zero. So given all my blathering on, give me your thoughts on how you get your no wind zero.
In the past I have heard the following..
1) just wait it out until you get a no wind day and zero at your desired distance (most obvious, but as I said, problematic for me)
2) establish a "no wind" zero at extremely short range, say 25 yards. (the thought here is that as long as the wind isn't crazy, the short distance will render it negligible)
3) find the longest indoor range that you can.
4) use a bore laser to as long a distance as you can see it and use that as your "no wind zero" (I have only heard this one once and it was from a shooter I have a lot of respect for. I understand the theory that regardless of elevation it will give you a good representation of where you want to be regarding L/R adjustment with zero wind, but it just doesn't seem right to me)
I have a 100 yard indoor range that is a couple hours away that I think I am going to try out and once I establish the zero, I may want to compare with #4 to see if that is realistic.
Thoughts?
For those of you who live in areas where wind is just a daily part of life, I wanted to hear your feedback. I am in San Antonio and finding a day/time with no wind (which is rare in the first place) and then having that synch up with a time that I can actually get out and get a no wind zero, is.. problematic.
I am shooting f-class and prefer to hold-off shoot rather than clicking L/R several times a match. In the interest of consistency, I would like to get a true no wind zero and use that instead of making due with my last adjustment and holding off based on that (that last part made more sense in my head).
I fully realize that even if one were to get a perfect "no wind" zero at say 100 yards, etc... that due to spin drift and other factors shooting at another distance (say 1000 yards) would require a different "no wind" L/R zero. So given all my blathering on, give me your thoughts on how you get your no wind zero.
In the past I have heard the following..
1) just wait it out until you get a no wind day and zero at your desired distance (most obvious, but as I said, problematic for me)
2) establish a "no wind" zero at extremely short range, say 25 yards. (the thought here is that as long as the wind isn't crazy, the short distance will render it negligible)
3) find the longest indoor range that you can.
4) use a bore laser to as long a distance as you can see it and use that as your "no wind zero" (I have only heard this one once and it was from a shooter I have a lot of respect for. I understand the theory that regardless of elevation it will give you a good representation of where you want to be regarding L/R adjustment with zero wind, but it just doesn't seem right to me)
I have a 100 yard indoor range that is a couple hours away that I think I am going to try out and once I establish the zero, I may want to compare with #4 to see if that is realistic.
Thoughts?