"Many scorebooks are cluttered with lines that don't get used and might be confusing. I asked Steve to eliminate the windage line for this reason. When you look at the page later (after the match) you might see what your wind settings were (assuming you filled them in) but you can no longer tell just what the wind was at the time and it won't really serve to guide you next time. A place to make notes (wind was 4 to 8 mph, used 3 to 5.5 moa left) is enough for that.The value line is there, with a circle around each number. You cam plot your call on the circle and the value within it. Of course, you also plot the shot number in the target postion of the sheet. Finally, the elevation line is still there. You should record elevation changes. They are not wind dependent and therefore relevant in their own right. You might discover that you barrel has a tendency to change elevation as the string goes on and that the tendency is repeatable. This will save you points in the future as you anticipate it." -- German Salazar, gasalazar@att.net, Shooters Journal
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200 Yard Standing Slow Fire .pdf (Adobe Acrobat) 200 Yard Standing Slow Fire .CAD (Autodesk QuickCAD) 200 Yard Standing Slow Fire .DWG (Autodesk AutoCAD 2000) |
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200 Yard Standing Slow Fire .pdf (Adobe Acrobat) 200 Yard Standing Slow Fire .CAD (Autodesk QuickCAD) 200 Yard Standing Slow Fire .DWG (Autodesk AutoCAD 2000) |