ok, probably been adressed before ,but when shooting downhill at a clanger( and i mean sometimes almost straight down!) whats the best hold on the target?Got a woodswalk coming up where most targets are shot from a ridge down into a swamp,great club
Which sounds like it contradicts what everyone else has said but it doesn't. If the target is at 45 degrees up or down then the actual horizontal distance is going to be shorter than the actual range of the shot by an order of 30 or 40 % (I'm guessing the % based off a chart I found earlier that gave the exact measurements but I cant find the dang thing now!)Flint62Smoothie said:Actually ... the TRUTH is that you hold, as you would normally, for the “horizontal” distance to the target!
Flint62Smoothie said:Actually ... the TRUTH is that you hold, as you would nornally, for the “horizontal” distance to the target!
Most squirrels I shoot around here are at less then 20 feet, horizontal and/or vertical in any plane.Skychief said:Flint62Smoothie said:Actually ... the TRUTH is that you hold, as you would nornally, for the “horizontal” distance to the target!
BINGO!!! :applause:
Many grey squirrels would wish (if they were able), that I'd never figured this out. :haha:
Simple. Works.
Wow Spence ... in all the years I've followed you, this is the 1st time you've been you've been wrong ...Spence10 said:The idea that only the horizontal distance needs to be considered when figuring the drop of steeply uphill or downhill shots is wrong.
Flint62Smoothie said:Actually ... the TRUTH is that you hold, as you would nornally, for the “horizontal” distance to the target!
Your right,, but let's just add a few words to it like "Exterior ballistics shooting up hill" and do a simple search. http://www.exteriorballistics.com/ebexplained/5th/33.cfmFlint62Smoothie said:Please look up 'exterior ballistics' ...
and further;Because of the firing elevation angle, the bullet trajectory no longer intersects the line of sight at the slant range Ro. In fact, the bullet passes well above the line of sight at that point, as Figure 3.3-1 (b) shows. In other words, the bullet shoots high from the shooter’s viewpoint as he or she aims the gun,
, and at steep angles it may shoot high by a considerable amount at longer ranges.
and the shooter still wants to hit his target,, he needs to aim low.the bullet shoots high from the shooter’s viewpoint as he or she aims the gun,
It's one of those ideas which hangs on in spite of it's being totally wrong, and seems to be impossible to kill.
Better information is available. Lyman, for instance.
Kansas Jake said:It can be done. All that has to happen is you need to be about 12 years old with an old 22 rimfire single shot and the rabbit is running out there around 60 feet away and you snap shoot and the rabbit dies. I did it once so I don't ever have to do it again. :blah:
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