Islander
Well-known member
I get -19" at 400 yards with 6.5 147gn ELD-M. That's sighted in at 100 but dialed for 232 for a 280 MPBR. That's only 5" low at 300 as well. Excellent hunting round.Only -20" at 400 yds! Boy that is flat!
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I get -19" at 400 yards with 6.5 147gn ELD-M. That's sighted in at 100 but dialed for 232 for a 280 MPBR. That's only 5" low at 300 as well. Excellent hunting round.Only -20" at 400 yds! Boy that is flat!
Only -20" at 400 yds! Boy that is flat!
l have heard a lot of long range shooters zero at 100 and just dial for everything. that kind of makes sense but l gurantee you that l would forget in the clutch.I haven’t heard of any good reasons for a 100 zero for western hunting. Care to elaborate?
l'm in the middle of doing this as well, it's tough to break 15 year old habbits.I voted for MPBR. That being said since I switched to the Leupold CDS system I find the load I want and order the turrets. Depending on round it will either be a 100yd 0 or a 200ys 0. I have several of these scopes on different rifles and they have been spot on. Before this I would figure out my MPBR and sight in my rifle for that and of course shoot to verify. I had a couple rifles that I would hand load different rounds for that I would keep the MPBR for on my rifle so I wouldn't forget in the heat of the moment.
I still like going to the range and shooting for a dope card.l have heard a lot of long range shooters zero at 100 and just dial for everything. that kind of makes sense but l gurantee you that l would forget in the clutch.
Hope ya don't misunderstand this, I have a strong preference for 6.5 cartridges. But I was reading a post by a guy a few days ago praising his 6.5 Creedmoor and he cme up with one of the great things about the Creedmoor was the bullet's weren't affected by the wind! Some of this stuff really get's crazy!I don't know that I'd accuse my 6.5 Creedmoor of being a flat shooter next to my .257...but at least it is pretty darn accurate.
I voted Other for about the same reason Redman posted.I voted for MPBR. That being said since I switched to the Leupold CDS system I find the load I want and order the turrets. Depending on round it will either be a 100yd 0 or a 200ys 0. I have several of these scopes on different rifles and they have been spot on. Before this I would figure out my MPBR and sight in my rifle for that and of course shoot to verify. I had a couple rifles that I would hand load different rounds for that I would keep the MPBR for on my rifle so I wouldn't forget in the heat of the moment.
If it seem's to easy, it probably is!l have heard a lot of long range shooters zero at 100 and just dial for everything. that kind of makes sense but l gurantee you that l would forget in the clutch.
This is a really good idea. This will be my first year in the field with a CDS system. With a little thought you could actually blend CDS and MPBR! This is a rough way of doing that. I’m still on my first cup of coffee, but am going to create a plan for this on my 300.I voted Other for about the same reason Redman posted.
For most of my hunting years I sighted my scopes 2-3" high at 100 for a MPBR out to 300 or so yards. I now have Leupold scopes with CDS turrets.
I had a custom CDS turret made for my .300 Weatherby and it has a zero stop at 200 yards which is a little over 1" high at 100 yards.
All of my other rifles with Leupold CDS turrets are zeroed at 100 yards, and I have range verified the CDS settings at 200, 300, and 430 yards and have painted a white dot at 100 yds and a thin white line for those distances on the top of the turret caps. Unless I'm in timber or thick brush, I hunt with the turret set at 200 yards and the scope power set no higher than 6X.