Coxy383 wrote:Thanks very much for your help mate.
No worries. I should've pointed out that that calculator is imperial but that link is to my metric presets for range and drop/drift, you can swap it back to yards and inches if you prefer. The input distances must be yards and inches but it will output in meters and centimeters if you tell it to. There are some other online calculators you can try as well.
It can be frustrating stretching straight out to long distances if you don't have a spotter, so just work your way out incrementally, recording your sight settings as you go. You'll very quickly get a feel for the curve. A BDC scope reticle can be a huge help too.
.22LR uses heeled cast bullets with very poor external ballistics so you'll find groups open up significantly with distance. With a high-velocity rifle and high-BC jacketed bullets a rifle that shoots one minute at 100m may well still hold one minute out to 300m or more before the groups start spreading. I haven't seen this with .22LR. The rifle may hold one minute (29mm) at 100m but might only manage two minutes (116mm) at 200m and might be holding three minutes (260mm) by 300m due to variations in the bullet and changes in the wind during its long flight time. At 500m my "one minute" rifles group in _roughly_ 750mm (about 5MoA) - once I've gotten a grip on the wind.
Have a look at this thread on the forum for the "Long Gong" competition done in Ireland if you want a very simple but challenging entertainment while you are practicing.
https://enoughgun.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=17&t=18502Three gongs of 4", 6" and 8" all shot at 300yd (274m) - for starting out I would put them no further than 200m but just put them wherever you are comfortable and move them out as you improve. The gongs don't need to be AR or BZ, 5mm mild steel is fine for 22LR, even 3mm mild would likely stand up to years of use. You can of course just cut some circles out of paper and tape them to a sheet of MDF while waiting for gongs, but even a spotting scope might struggle to see .22-cal holes at that distance so you'll be doing some walking.