DrawandDuck Posted February 24, 2008 Share Posted February 24, 2008 I'm also new to Open shooting. My scope doesn't have those lines in it.............. BOZ.....I got you covered, next time I see you give me 2 min. with your gun in the safe area and YOU WILL HAVE LINES!!! Randal PS....NO CHARGE FOR THE CUSTOM C-MORE LINES Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
boz1911 Posted February 24, 2008 Share Posted February 24, 2008 I'm also new to Open shooting. My scope doesn't have those lines in it.............. BOZ.....I got you covered, next time I see you give me 2 min. with your gun in the safe area and YOU WILL HAVE LINES!!! Randal PS....NO CHARGE FOR THE CUSTOM C-MORE LINES Thanks RW, I figured it was one of master/gm kinda things! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Big Guy Posted February 25, 2008 Share Posted February 25, 2008 I'm also new to Open shooting. My scope doesn't have those lines in it.............. I just added the lines to the C-more with my Dremel. The problem was to get the numbers to be readable. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jaxshooter Posted February 25, 2008 Share Posted February 25, 2008 The lines will make the dot eaiser to find in the sun or when shooting weak hand. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chris Keen Posted February 25, 2008 Share Posted February 25, 2008 You Florida guys are crazy Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
XD Niner Posted February 25, 2008 Share Posted February 25, 2008 You Florida guys are crazy Hey, I resemble that remark! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Big Guy Posted February 25, 2008 Share Posted February 25, 2008 The lines will make the dot eaiser to find in the sun or when shooting weak hand. No problem with the sun. I already had my C-more lens tinted with 20% window film. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AZ38super Posted February 25, 2008 Share Posted February 25, 2008 When I am shooting I don't see the rise, just the wiggle as I move the gun around. I am looking at the target not the dot. When I was testing loads for power factor with the chrono I found that at about 1410 fps there was no dot movement, it would just sit solid. This will vary by gun, grip, loads and such, as we were just talking about yesterday with a couple shooters and one that was getting lots of jump on a gun with popples and comp versus my gun with just a comp. The same can be said with noise blast and flash with the same load from one gun to the next. As long as it times the same each shot who cares, just go with it. It should be up and back down fast enough for the next shot. I don't recall the classifier name but it has three targets at very close range with 5 shots each, I run it without even looking at the dot and get a pretty tight group just by timing of the gun with point and shoot method. I can run into problems trying to pull the trigger to fast though. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AlamoShooter Posted February 25, 2008 Share Posted February 25, 2008 (edited) I really do not care how much the dot moves, What I want is for it to go ware I am looking. the gun is back on target and my eyes can see the shot ready -Way before- I can pull the trigger. = I'm fixing that Any way to I know it does not move any more than your dot does. What will help you is to readjust your attention= I teach Sporting Clays and that game is all about what you see. = moving targets constantly changing direction. The shooter has to see the -Target- and be aware of the barrel. just like shooting an open handgun the question of how much does the dot move is just like "How much Lead did you see" on a sporting target. I really am not aware of the dot moving much at all I busy my self with looking past the gun to the target. On tight shots or father out I increase my awareness of the dot. I can watch lost of shooter and tell when they are looking AT The Dot, shooting like it is an Iron sight gun. I end up scoring better than faster shooters with more talent , just because I know ware to look. The answer to the question of "How much Lead do I see on a sporting target"? = I see Enough. How aware of the dot do I want to be? = "Enough" Edited February 25, 2008 by AlamoShooter Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RacerX1166 Posted February 25, 2008 Share Posted February 25, 2008 The lines will make the dot eaiser to find in the sun or when shooting weak hand. No problem with the sun. I already had my C-more lens tinted with 20% window film. Maybe some spinners to hook up to the comp too? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
blkbrd Posted February 26, 2008 Share Posted February 26, 2008 I hear what you guys are saying, however, I'm interested in knowing what kind of dot rise is reasonable. For example, if grip/technique/etc. was good (lets say the shooter is a Master class shooter), and his dot rise was up around 4 or even off the screen, I bet you guys would be saying that that was too much and to try a different powder, or bullet, or spring or whatever. ...I'm just trying to figure out what kind of rise one should expect out of a Open gun. There has to be a number that is too much otherwise having the compensator is pointless. Just my 2C Master-Yep Someone who learned the hard and expensive way that pursuing the perfect flat gun was a huge waste of time-Yep My dot rise is in the 4 range at 168PF but it is straight up and down without to much blast or hand slap. I found loads that worked the comp well enough to have a 1 but it was like shooting a loud tuning fork and hard to call your shots or have the dot not do circles. As long as you don't loose the dot and it goes straight up and returns to point of aim smoothly I don't think it matters as much as you think if its a 1 or 6. Try putting a 9Lb spring in, shooting ten thousand rounds of a smooth 125 grain load, then tuning. You Florida guys are crazy Yep- but I seem to remember you coming down and whipping some of us. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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