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The brilliance in this statement just about blew up the internet.I voted MPBR cause I thought it meant Many Pabst Blue Ribbons.
-Less environmental and shooter error factors affecting a rock solid zero.
-Almost always easier to find a place to check zero at 100 than beyond.
-At "there he is! Shoot him!" distance you aren't 2 or 3 inches high.
Now, admittedly maybe some of these are small issues, but almost everyone who is dialing to shoot at distances 200 yds and beyond that I know is emphatic about zeroing at 100.
There is a reason that all of the top precision rifle shooters zero at 100 and it is backed by an understanding of ballistics. It significantly reduces error from your zero compared to zeroing at longer distances. By zeroing, I mean the distance that is used to finalize where a rifles sights/scope is set for elevation and windage NOT the distance at which POA/POI are the same. There is a reason why ballistic calculators have inputs for zero offset on windage and elevation.
I make a point to use scopes that I'm confident in dialing correctly and holding zero. In that case, it makes sense to get POI/POA as close as possible at 100 yards. If I'm worried about holding corrections for 200 yards, it's an easy 0.4 mil (about 1.5 MOA) correction dialed into my scope before I start hunting. It's also a common basis for people to communicate in drop at distances as MIL or MOA corrections but if you and everyone you communicate about these things with use a different zero distance that info is worthless.
If you dont use turrets, it is still more accurate to zero at 100 with an elevation offset.
I wont tell anyone that zeroing at 200 or longer ranges cant be effective and work just fine but statistically speaking you are more likely to be inducing error into your aiming system by doing so.
I hadn’t thought about the zeroing error mentioned by @Wind Gypsy, so I might rethink the 200 yard zero I just did on my 30 Nosler with a dialing turret then carry it dialed for 200.
Only -20" at 400 yds! Boy that is flat!I zeroed my .257wby at 300, it's +2.5/3" at 100/200, -7" at 400, -20" at 500. My 6.5Creed is zeroed at 200 and it's +2" at 100 and -7" at 300 and -20" at 400. Those rifles both have plain jane duplex scopes aboard. My 6.5PRC is zeroed at 100 but has a ballistic turret that so far I've set up out to 400yds, it works really nice.