@RobsReloading, I have found your videos very informative. I intend to shoot the Rayners long range match at least once this season. Being new to the long range game, I think it would help me prepare if I had some additional background on participation in the Rayners match specifically. Could you do a video on the key things to know about shooting their long range match? I've been able to get a sense of how the match is run from your videos, but more detail would be helpful to a first timer in this event. If you could convey your preps/experiences with; - ranging targets? / checking zeros? - typically how many stages? / rounds fired? - number of shooters? / how long does the match take? - other key gear to have (besides the basics (gun, ammo, dope)? and anything else you think is important. I'm also interested in how you execute your camera set ups to capture your actions on the gun and at the targets. Any info you can provide is appreciated. Thanks!
I’ve shot this match probably 6 or 8 times. I think my highest score is maybe around 415. the conditions really dictate the difficulty. This was the highest placement out of all the rayners matches I’ve shot however.
@@RobsReloading thats crazy, looks like it barely moves! I can see why the light bolt lift, smooth travel etc is important in a precision rifle. Cool video.
It’s something I need to watch next time. I found that series of shots the most interesting to watch. The flag being in view seemed to explain the difficulty with that group of targets
@@RobsReloading It's a journey. Practicing well rounded concepts is something I'm only realizing now. That middle sequence of shots is the perfect example of what people mean when they are calling wind. So immediate are the inputs from the flag that you could almost imagine during that last set what the flag out of frame is doing shot to shot. The big one is when the shot went high. That's a lot of wind thrash that came on very quickly.