Love this vid!!! I’m replying to the part in vid with y’all talking about 2000 yds and canted pic rails. I run a NF atacr on a 6.5 CM and I had mirage ULR make a 60 moa canted rail. With this set up, here in the hills of WV, I shoot this out to 1965 yds in winter and out to 2270 in the summer with great hit success. It may sound crazy or un true but I shoot 4-5 days a week and out to these elr distances 1-3 days a week. What’s something to think about, at 2210 yards, with the load I’m correctly using, a one mph crosswind is 32.2 “‘s. Once one shoots these distances then comes back to a grand, it is a psychologically benefit. Love y’all’s material and podcasts!!!!
ONEILLOPS 6.5 creedmoor, 136 Lapua scenar L (0.556 bc). 2864 FPS @ 70 degrees. 2000 yds dope. 70 degrees/ 27.50 SP direction of fire 300 degrees, 31.2 mils. 4.6 mils with a 90 degree wind at 10 mph. Now I’ve experimented with higher bc bullets but in my opinion the bc from one bullet to the next is most important along with extreme spread. A 20 FPS es is 4.2 feet at 2000 yds with this load. I appreciate you commenting back with a question!!
ONEILLOPS I have 34 mils of usable elevation in this setup. NF atacr 5-25 ffp with a 60 moa canted base. Base made by Mirage ULR in Texas by George Banky. I think the pic base was less than $100 for the aluminum one. All, I can only dial under my 100 yard zero 1.5 mils. I guess the scope has 35.5 mils if total elevation even though NF claims it only has 120 moa of elevation.
I’m sorry but I have to state one more thing, if you plug my numbers into a standard ballistic computer, you may see it say I only need about 28-30 mils of elevation, but if you calculate what happens in the real world to a bullet once it goes through trans S and sub S, and also take in consideration AJ, dir of fire and a couple other factors you will see my door adds up. Again, thanks and I hope y’all have another podcast with Mr Davidson!!
Fuck oh dear I'm lucky. I've been the first to watch the last 2 videos. You guys are badass. I love all the info that you share. Can't wait til the next video.
One hour and fifty eight minutes ? .............. are ya sure !?! I could understand if it was Chad Dixon you were interviewing, but buddy, I just don’t have the life expectancy for this.
@@aceprecision1681 I always hate seeing people unsubscribe, but I can not cater to everyone... if our podcasts or videos are too long, UA-cam has an awesome feature they call a timeline, you can ffwd, rwnd, and or skip the entirety...
I'm surprised no one has commented on how loud my dad's breathing. This video is gold, he drops some info that you can't hear anywhere else.
Your dad knows his stuff man!
Perfectly done. All the information you could ever need. I want one of each model in every caliber.
Another awesome podcast! I could listen to these over and over!
THE MUSIC AND VIOLIN 🎻 IS A GREAT START MY FRIEND!!😉👉
Love this vid!!! I’m replying to the part in vid with y’all talking about 2000 yds and canted pic rails. I run a NF atacr on a 6.5 CM and I had mirage ULR make a 60 moa canted rail. With this set up, here in the hills of WV, I shoot this out to 1965 yds in winter and out to 2270 in the summer with great hit success. It may sound crazy or un true but I shoot 4-5 days a week and out to these elr distances 1-3 days a week. What’s something to think about, at 2210 yards, with the load I’m correctly using, a one mph crosswind is 32.2 “‘s. Once one shoots these distances then comes back to a grand, it is a psychologically benefit. Love y’all’s material and podcasts!!!!
What caliber u running and what's your come up at 2k?
ONEILLOPS 6.5 creedmoor, 136 Lapua scenar L (0.556 bc). 2864 FPS @ 70 degrees. 2000 yds dope. 70 degrees/ 27.50 SP direction of fire 300 degrees, 31.2 mils. 4.6 mils with a 90 degree wind at 10 mph. Now I’ve experimented with higher bc bullets but in my opinion the bc from one bullet to the next is most important along with extreme spread. A 20 FPS es is 4.2 feet at 2000 yds with this load. I appreciate you commenting back with a question!!
ONEILLOPS I have 34 mils of usable elevation in this setup. NF atacr 5-25 ffp with a 60 moa canted base. Base made by Mirage ULR in Texas by George Banky. I think the pic base was less than $100 for the aluminum one. All, I can only dial under my 100 yard zero 1.5 mils. I guess the scope has 35.5 mils if total elevation even though NF claims it only has 120 moa of elevation.
I’m sorry but I have to state one more thing, if you plug my numbers into a standard ballistic computer, you may see it say I only need about 28-30 mils of elevation, but if you calculate what happens in the real world to a bullet once it goes through trans S and sub S, and also take in consideration AJ, dir of fire and a couple other factors you will see my door adds up. Again, thanks and I hope y’all have another podcast with Mr Davidson!!
Fuck oh dear I'm lucky. I've been the first to watch the last 2 videos. You guys are badass. I love all the info that you share. Can't wait til the next video.
Love it!
Can you guys review the Gunwerks suppressors? Would like your impressions versus what you have seen and been using
Absolutely
ONEILLOPS and your podcasts length is perfect, gets me through 25% of my day!!
Where the killing man I won’t to see heads pop
One hour and fifty eight minutes ? .............. are ya sure !?!
I could understand if it was Chad Dixon you were interviewing, but buddy, I just don’t have the life expectancy for this.
So don't use up your life expectancy on this.
ONEILLOPS Yeah, you’re dead right ......... UNSUBSCRIBED !
@@aceprecision1681 I always hate seeing people unsubscribe, but I can not cater to everyone... if our podcasts or videos are too long, UA-cam has an awesome feature they call a timeline, you can ffwd, rwnd, and or skip the entirety...
ACE, YOU SERIOUSLY NEED TO GET A LIFE, YOU ARE SERIOUSLY JEALOUS AND PATHETIC!!😉👉
@@ONEILLOPS DON'T WASTE YOUR TIME TO RESPONDING TO THESE DEGENERATE LOWEST FORMS ON EARTH, KEEP GOING WITH YOUR GREAT INFORMATIVE PODCASTS!!
Do you guys mess around with shotguns much? For any given purpose.