shooting uphill (or down) means slightly LESS gravitational effect depressing the strike point. Think of shooting vertically up;the bullet will slow, but not move further away from the sight line. If firing significantly up hill you may hold under a little, not hold over. Counter-intuitive, I know, but the laws of physics ;-)
Dont worry, everything is great with the rifle and scope. Your math and trigonometry are good, but on the first shot you lay down the barrel on the box and that's why the shot was above the center. The second attempt failed below the center, because you lay down the rifle properly. Never lay down rifle on the barrel... By the way, nice gun. ;)
Hattie B’s chicken t-shirt! Tennessee representing!
You know it!
I have one in 30-06 and it makes me look better at the range than l really am
Can I put red army steel case ammo in this gun? Will it harm it? (308 t3x
shooting uphill (or down) means slightly LESS gravitational effect depressing the strike point. Think of shooting vertically up;the bullet will slow, but not move further away from the sight line. If firing significantly up hill you may hold under a little, not hold over. Counter-intuitive, I know, but the laws of physics ;-)
Hello. What size scope mounts did you use? Low? Medium?
These are the the Low - Pro Series 1 Inch Rings. With how my cheek/eye lines up (and scope clearance) the low ones worked for my set up.
Dont worry, everything is great with the rifle and scope. Your math and trigonometry are good, but on the first shot you lay down the barrel on the box and that's why the shot was above the center. The second attempt failed below the center, because you lay down the rifle properly. Never lay down rifle on the barrel... By the way, nice gun. ;)
Hey friend, that is too far off. Something is not right with the scope or the gun. Now it could be you, but that is really off for that gun.
caliber?
300 win mag