womble wrote:I don’t see a red dot being ideal 100-150
223 I’d assume head shots for wallabies in Tassie.
I don’t think you’ll be keeping your 7615 for very long but anyway, fast target acquisition a compact 2-9 with a fast throw thingy on the variable thingy would be awesome.
I think in that terrain you’ll be taking more than most inside 100
womble wrote:I don’t see a red dot being ideal 100-150
223 I’d assume head shots for wallabies in Tassie.
I don’t think you’ll be keeping your 7615 for very long but anyway, fast target acquisition a compact 2-9 with a fast throw thingy on the variable thingy would be awesome.
I think in that terrain you’ll be taking more than most inside 100
Oldbloke wrote:3-9×40
2-7×30
Blr243 wrote:U csn get a little dovetail mount. So that you can have a red dot beside a tube scobe the red dot sits at 45 degrees. So u can have both scopes same time. I did thst on my 7600 once
S O K A R wrote:As in a red dot + magnifier type set up?
Shootermick wrote:womble wrote:I don’t see a red dot being ideal 100-150
223 I’d assume head shots for wallabies in Tassie.
I don’t think you’ll be keeping your 7615 for very long but anyway, fast target acquisition a compact 2-9 with a fast throw thingy on the variable thingy would be awesome.
I think in that terrain you’ll be taking more than most inside 100
Not a 7615 fan I take it?
womble wrote:Good suggestions
But I'd go folding straight forend grip with a back up Lazer/fleshlight and deployable bipod legs.
womble wrote:It can shoot louder
womble wrote:I think people are taking the piss a bit here and that’s not very nice.
When the s**t hits the fan out there. And you are surrounded by a horde of incoming wallabies
Your life may depend on that rapid deployment tactical bipod with lazers.