I use a Tikka 30-06, shoot 165 grain copper and a 3x9 scope (no dialing for me) for all my big game rifle hunting. This is not some target rifle, but what I would consider a pretty general purpose hunting rifle. I am not a shooting guru that is tinkering with handloads, not using chronographs, and not going to the range weekly. I'd suspect (thought I don't measure) that I shoot ~1.75" groups at 100, on average. I do have a rangefinder I use in the field.
Looking at a ballistic calculators... If I am zeroed at 250yards, I would be -3.7" at 300 and +2.8" at 100. Seems like a reasonable way to set up my rifle for a trip out west. Suppose I wanted to sight in this way. How would you go about sighting in at 250 yards? Do I do my best to get close to 2.8" high at 100? But my groups do not allow me to measure 1/10" that precisely, obviously. And 1/4" matters at that distance for where you're hitting down range. But I could do my best to do that, and then get some real worl data on where its hitting at further range. Or do I try to sight-in at 250 yards? In this instance, my groups start to grow and there are more factors at play... a bit of wind, certainly my aiming point has more error (even with benchrest), etc.
FWIW, I have it sighted in at ABOUT 2" high and this has worked just fine for me on multiple western hunts and stand hunting the woods back east. I think the farthest I've shot was about 260 and this setup worked just fine.
I'm just curious about your thoughts. People say "I'm sighted in at 2" high at 100" or "I'm sighted in at 200 yards" all the time, but I'm just curious how you go about doing so in the real world.
Looking at a ballistic calculators... If I am zeroed at 250yards, I would be -3.7" at 300 and +2.8" at 100. Seems like a reasonable way to set up my rifle for a trip out west. Suppose I wanted to sight in this way. How would you go about sighting in at 250 yards? Do I do my best to get close to 2.8" high at 100? But my groups do not allow me to measure 1/10" that precisely, obviously. And 1/4" matters at that distance for where you're hitting down range. But I could do my best to do that, and then get some real worl data on where its hitting at further range. Or do I try to sight-in at 250 yards? In this instance, my groups start to grow and there are more factors at play... a bit of wind, certainly my aiming point has more error (even with benchrest), etc.
FWIW, I have it sighted in at ABOUT 2" high and this has worked just fine for me on multiple western hunts and stand hunting the woods back east. I think the farthest I've shot was about 260 and this setup worked just fine.
I'm just curious about your thoughts. People say "I'm sighted in at 2" high at 100" or "I'm sighted in at 200 yards" all the time, but I'm just curious how you go about doing so in the real world.