August 16, 2002, 10:27 AM | #1 |
Senior Member
Join Date: August 7, 2000
Location: Floating down the James River in VA
Posts: 2,599
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Sight in distance
A few questions before muzzleloader-deer season
At what range do you sight in your muzzleloader for hunting? Do you shoot the same load every year? Do you know your trajectory at every distance out to your personal maximum range with that load? |
August 17, 2002, 10:27 AM | #2 |
Staff
Join Date: November 2, 1998
Location: Colorado
Posts: 21,838
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Haven't hunted w/muzzleloader yet but was told 75 yards was a good distance. Hold over & hold under to adjust.
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August 19, 2002, 04:28 PM | #3 |
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Join Date: August 7, 2000
Location: Floating down the James River in VA
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I've been trying to find a nice point blank distance. Unfortunately, putting it dead on at 25yds darn near sends the 320gr conical over the target frame at 50yds. I have to drop the 25 yd zero quite low to impact slightly high at 50yds, with a slightly low (1-2") drop at 75yds and a decent drop at 100yds. I dislike having the rifle sighted so low at close range, as that's usually where deer love to pop up at.
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August 19, 2002, 04:47 PM | #4 |
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Join Date: June 30, 2002
Posts: 688
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What kind of rifle? What kind of sights?
I take it you have a scope mounted very high above the bore. |
August 20, 2002, 11:37 AM | #5 |
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Join Date: August 7, 2000
Location: Floating down the James River in VA
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Nope. T/C Grey Hawk with irons. I'm shooting a 320gr Lee REAL conical (I've verified the weights, they run a little heavy) over 90grs of Pyrodex.
Part of the problem is that crappy bead sight and V-notch combo. I shoot very poorly with it. |
August 21, 2002, 08:20 AM | #6 |
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Join Date: June 30, 2002
Posts: 688
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The sights have to be your problem. There is no other reason other than a high mounted scope that could cause these problems.
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