Ah you must know a lot of experienced new guys.Unless someone is completely oblivious....they are not going to hold in the middle and hope for no wind. The majority of the game is about reading the wind.
Mike
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Ah you must know a lot of experienced new guys.Unless someone is completely oblivious....they are not going to hold in the middle and hope for no wind. The majority of the game is about reading the wind.
Mike
Its my belief all this doesn’t really matter. There is a good bit of luck involved in ft. I mean if every time you pull the trigger a gust of wind kicks up you are not going to have a good day!
I was “oblivious” to the wind for 2 yearsUnless someone is completely oblivious....they are not going to hold in the middle and hope for no wind. The majority of the game is about reading the wind.
Mike
So perhaps people should pay closer attention to what pellet has the best ballistic coefficient?I was “oblivious” to the wind for 2 years
now I’m totally obsessed with learning this wind game!
To date no one has made a gun or pellet combo capable of defeating the wind! If they did people would pay dearly for it!!!
So perhaps people should pay closer attention to what pellet has the best ballistic coefficient?
Yes, it’s a thought but as I understand it, pellet weight is very important in the wind equation… so if an arms race, it’s also an ammunition race or a clear understanding of how the wind affects a pellet and barrel combination in relation to the windSo perhaps people should pay closer attention to what pellet has the best ballistic coefficient?
Exactly .... The "LUCK" lye's in that your educated guess in correction other than straight on is better than the others your shooting against !!Unless someone is completely oblivious....they are not going to hold in the middle and hope for no wind. The majority of the game is about reading the wind.
Mike
I may regret this but, I have some stats. As yall might know I have plenty of expensive FT guns and Scopes. Even so, Prior to this weekend my highest percentage of KZ hits on a 64 shot known course was 58%.Yep I said it, and not for the first time.
Some sure seem to get heated up about that statement. Others are pragmatic enough to accept reality.
When guys are running "bb guns" that cost north of $8-10k, there's not much of an argument against it being an arms race.
When I say "arms race" I'm talking about the perpetual creep that results in ever bigger side wheels, more expensive scopes and guns, more complicated bipods, and generally more gadgetry for the classes where that's allowed, etc.
The arms race is a result of a combination of factors. First of those is that in any competition that is similarly equipment-dependent, you'll see the same thing. Competitors will spend big to acquire what they feel is the most competitive equipment. Another is the demographic....field target competitors are primarily a collection of well-to-do geezers, and many of those are retired, with the time and money to be silly about how they spend that time and money. Another is psychology...if I just buy THAT gun or THAT scope then I'll be at the top in future matches. In that sense, the arms race is as much a personal battle as it is a side-quest competition with the rest of the field. Furthermore, and another part of the psychology, is that it's simply fun to try out new guns and scopes. And who's going to buy a lower quality gun or scope than what they already have? So of course that feeds into the process of continually spending more and more and the average price of a rig in any given ft competition creeping up and up and up over the years. In that sense, some of the arms race is the over-used adage of, "you get what you pay for."
All of that is fine and dandy, and it's simply the reality of the field target game.
The negative aspect of the arms race is those rare times when a newcomer is at their first match and we have to tell them the price of the borrowed rig they're fondling. It's hard for them to envision themselves being part of the collection of field target competitors since they haven't mentally worked their way up to the great financial heights incrementally like most of us have. I say that from personal experience when I was new, and from the exact same facial expression I see when I introduce someone to field target.
As for the inevitable, "it's the indian, not the arrow" straw man logic rebuttals that are sure to come.....There is very certainly a price threshold that must be crossed to get into "competitive" territory. Yeah yeah, "so and so won with an entry level _______________ back in 20XX." Those cases are rare, and speak much to the skill of that individual competitor. In the main example I see used, that guy is now shooting a $3-4K scope/gun combo, NOT the entry level rig that he did well with that year. For most of us mere mortals, quality equipment ($$$) must be invested in if a guy has any intentions of being competitive, then of course comes practice to complete the rest of the winning equation. Hence my earlier statement about how equipment-dependent field target is.
And there you have the arms race.
(And with that, let the online battle commence).
I may regret this but, I have some stats. As yall might know I have plenty of expensive FT guns and Scopes. Even so, Prior to this weekend my highest percentage of KZ hits on a 64 shot known course was 58%.
This weekend was my first chance to run the course with - A) my new Thomas carbine and - B) my new NX8 sitting on top. I am comparing my new HFT rifle and scope to my Redwolf with a Sightron S3 (not a slouch by any means).
Although looking into the afternoon sun was problematic, West facing course, and I really needed to turn on my illuminating reticle, I didn’t, here are the results - note yards to target ranged to the right of score. One shot per target on a fairly still day.
71.8% or approx a 13% plus improvement.
For the safety of the shooter no standers or kneelers were involved.
View attachment 572669
So was it the Thomas or the NX8 for the improvement?I may regret this but, I have some stats. As yall might know I have plenty of expensive FT guns and Scopes. Even so, Prior to this weekend my highest percentage of KZ hits on a 64 shot known course was 58%.
This weekend was my first chance to run the course with - A) my new Thomas carbine and - B) my new NX8 sitting on top. I am comparing my new HFT rifle and scope to my Redwolf with a Sightron S3 (not a slouch by any means).
Although looking into the afternoon sun was problematic, West facing course, and I really needed to turn on my illuminating reticle, I didn’t, here are the results - note yards to target ranged to the right of score. One shot per target on a fairly still day.
71.8% or approx a 13% plus improvement.
For the safety of the shooter no standers or kneelers were involved.
View attachment 572669
I race motorcycles. I always say the harder you work at home. The better your luck at the track.Exactly .... The "LUCK" lye's in that your educated guess in correction other than straight on is better than the others your shooting against !!
Luck is for the unprepared willing to expect good result .... it fostered the Cliche of "Dumb Luck"
I may regret this but, I have some stats. As yall might know I have plenty of expensive FT guns and Scopes. Even so, Prior to this weekend my highest percentage of KZ hits on a 64 shot known course was 58%.
This weekend was my first chance to run the course with - A) my new Thomas carbine and - B) my new NX8 sitting on top. I am comparing my new HFT rifle and scope to my Redwolf with a Sightron S3 (not a slouch by any means).
Although looking into the afternoon sun was problematic, West facing course, and I really needed to turn on my illuminating reticle, I didn’t, here are the results - note yards to target ranged to the right of score. One shot per target on a fairly still day.
71.8% or approx a 13% plus improvement.
For the safety of the shooter no standers or kneelers were involved.
View attachment 572669
How about an old Sling and pebble (David and Goliath type ) with limits on sling length and pebble weight of course .I'd like to use mini artillery equipment to hit the targets; ballistae, catapults, trebuchets, and mortars.
Im kind of surprised of any improvement unless it was just conditions or whatever. The Thomas setup is not much more accurate than a RW. Not sure how you can really improve on 1/2 MOA or better at 50y from a RW. Its so minute at the difference that I dont see anyones score going up from it. Benchrest, possibly a tad but thats it. I shoot with too many of each. Its more the person understanding how to use their tools and have the dope and ranging setup right and handling the conditions properly. I beat many RWs and Thomas with my Marauder. You can buy accuracy to a point.I'm not surprised by your 13% improvement. It's likely multifactorial....the most obvious, and germane to this topic, is the equipment. But you've also been doing this longer now, so practice and experience. And the placebo effect of feeling you've now got the ultimate gun/scope combination is probably at play too.
So what were your misses? Mis-ranged? Brain fart/wrong holdover? Incorrect wind read? General instability? (And in a MUCH lower prevalence....flyers?)
Most all misses were related to targets with very small or illegal sized KZ's. For instance if i missed a target using holdover... i would then dial in the correct clicks and try again and the target would fall... so mostly holdover challenges, i didn't count the reshoots as it was just a dope validation.I'm not surprised by your 13% improvement. It's likely multifactorial....the most obvious, and germane to this topic, is the equipment. But you've also been doing this longer now, so practice and experience. And the placebo effect of feeling you've now got the ultimate gun/scope combination is probably at play too.
So what were your misses? Mis-ranged? Brain fart/wrong holdover? Incorrect wind read? General instability? (And in a MUCH lower prevalence....flyers?)