LHSmith said:
Mozella said:
LHSmith said:
;...............snip.......... Without flags you are just guessing ......snip.........
I would argue that WITH flags you're still guessing. Otherwise they would call my sport "F-Class X Ring Demonstration" rather than F-Class Competition.
Reading flags beyond 300 yards would be problematic for obvious reasons. All successful short range BR competitors in the last 35 years have used flags. SR BR = 100 - 300 yds, F-Class 300 - 1200 yds.
You missed my point. We use flags in F-Class too, they're just fewer and a lot larger than the ones used in short range BR which are sometimes so numerous they look like someone is planting a garden of radishes. Wind flags are invaluable in competition; no argument there.
But my response is to the idea that you can do accurate load development in the wind by reading the wind flags. Well, perhaps there are a few folks who can, but if it was all that easy, manufacturers of firearms and ammunition wouldn't build those expensive testing tunnels.
I would argue that the average person reading this forum in search for advice (or those here who are giving advice) are kidding themselves if they believe they can evaluate a significant wind accurately enough to do quality load development on windy days.
Yes, there are those who budget 15 rounds for load development, shoot a small 3 shot group, and use that as their eureka moment as they claim they found the perfect recipe. That's not likely to be the path to Nirvana.
When you're picking the fly sh**t out of the pepper, you're searching for tiny differences in performance, often measured in a few thousandths of an inch. Testing different brands of primer or determining if sorting Lapua cases by weight is really worth it requires a very careful test set-up as well as precise target evaluation in order to produce truly scientific results. Measuring group size with a carpenters tape is not going to do the job. The last thing you need is an additional factor thrown in which is not only nearly impossible to measure accurately, it's constantly changing, second-by-second, during the testing session.
Ask any competitor who shoots a match in windy conditions, like I did just yesterday. One guy had a mechanical malfunction as a valid excuse, but nobody else mentioned having the wrong scope, the wrong charge weight, the wrong primer, or anything else related to equipment or tuning. We all explained our less-than-600 scores by talking about the changing wind and our inability to judge it accurately enough to put all our rounds in the X ring in spite of the fact that every shooter there had a rifle fully capable of hitting the X ring nearly every time along with the shooting skill to do so except for one thing........... the wind.
BR shooters talk about relative humidity, barometric pressure, and the amount of sunshine hitting their barrel on windless days. But when the wind pipes up, they too talk about almost nothing except the wind when explaining why they didn't shoot a world's record.