Wednesday, May 04, 2016

I have discovered that a dot at the center of the crosshairs

may well be wonderful as a 'put it on the spot and press' thing, but- for me at least- it can make shooting for accuracy a bit difficult compared to straight crosshairs.  Shouldn't, but seems to.  Something about keeping the dot centered on the bullseye.

It was a good day at the range anyway, about which I have something else to write, except I just realized 'no pictures'.  So that part'll have to come later.  But it worked.

Did get a chance to shoot something interesting:  a Ruger Blackhawk in

.30 Carbine(stock photo, not the one in question).  Talk about muzzle blast... very sharp 'crack'.  Recoil's nothing bad, but definitely a 'snap'.  I'd love to be able to borrow it when I can set up the Chrony and find out what velocity that little 110-grain bullet is moving at from a 7.5" barrel.  Guys on the rifle side were looking around like "What the hell is he shooting?"  Accuracy was impressive; at 50 yards it put four into about a 4" group, with two high(I blame myself for those).  Wonder how soft points, or those new Hornady hollowpoints, would expand out of this?

Mind you, if you were close to a bad guy the muzzle blast might well cause enough disruption to send them away(possibly with a shirt on fire).



4 comments:

  1. Anonymous12:15 PM

    I have one of those, handloading for it is fun. The only live thing I ever shot with it was a feral cat back when I was farming. Explosive expansion doesn't cover it.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Gerry N.7:48 PM

    My best friend owned one, we handloaded some 130 gr cast bullets for it (Discontinued Lee mold), wheelweight alloy, tumble lubed, 18gr. 2400, light recoil, lotsa noise, group size @ 50M about twice factory hardball in an M1 Carbine= 8" vs 4". The ones salvaged from the dirt berm showed pretty impressive expansion.

    Within 75 M I see it as an acceptable deer load. It is legal in Wa. State as is any centerfire arm with a bore of .243" (6mm) or larger and a barrel of 4" or longer.

    Gerry N.

    ReplyDelete
  3. BFR has a .45-70 Revolver I am wanting to try out.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Anonymous2:37 PM

    With a target dot, place the dot outside the point of impact, top or bottom of the bull for better accuracy.

    ReplyDelete

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.