padaro wrote:A hit on a running rabbit's a good shot any time
Yeah I use a shotgun for those pesky little running ones, other wise I couldn't hit em
padaro wrote:A hit on a running rabbit's a good shot any time


tom604 wrote:200 yards by worlds top shooter, perhaps, not to many here in sunny Australia, most are now in Iran and Syria.
well ill be polite. and while you didnt make any reference to the adf and you were talking about .22. you did say not to many in Aus and then threw in the fishing line with the bait of,,most are NOW in iran ect
now you either mean that the worlds best .22 shooters are now in iran or that the best Australian .22 shooters are there
or "and how you would know this ?" the worlds best snipers,USA,Canada,British are in iran, syria.
and i loved the end bit, "may surprise even you" giving the impression that you "know"![]()
you normally don't leave yourself open like this, bad night at the mall![]()


No mention of Iran or Syria

Combat_Wombat wrote:Wait so now cavok is implying that our pilots doing air strikes are the best .22 shooters in Australia?




KWhorenet wrote:I still don't see how our best shots in the country (even totally disregarding .22 cal movie thing) have anything to do with any of the above. But I see my presuming you WERE talking about our ADF was correct![]()
Being trained to survive and carry out tactical manoeuvres doesn't make our guys crack shots. YOU would be surprised how LITTLE our ADF actually get to practice shooting, according to a qualified ARMY sniper retired recently. Our Snipers for example are lucky to get to shoot 10 times a year mainly thanks to retard officers who want to SAVE ammo and couldn't manage the logistics of forecasting usage, which he said was common nowadays. He also stated shooting makes up around 10% of their trade. Without bragging, I'm no less of a shot than most of them, believe it or not. I think you will find most keen shooters who have some ability and time on trigger can shoot on par or better.
Their accuracy pass mark is worse than my own personal pass mark I assure you.
Cheers anyway.
And Tom604, you crack me up, Mall ninjas lol








Ade wrote:This was a good post until some tools started going on about who's got the bigger dick when it come to knowledge of ADF around the world


DaleH wrote:Dad and me use to practice with the 22 by setting up bottles at + 25m with the neck facing us and shoot the base out of the bottle through the neck - broke lots of bottles but when you get it right, it is a buzz

Westy wrote:I thought the thread was about your best shots not your worst??????![]()
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AlanK wrote:It's because I'm sooooo good that when I miss it's the fluke





KWhorenet wrote:Thank you for you added value. Were your feelings hurt?

DaleH wrote:Dad and me use to practice with the 22 by setting up bottles at + 25m with the neck facing us and shoot the base out of the bottle through the neck - broke lots of bottles but when you get it right, it is a buzz

Combat_Wombat wrote:While we are on the topic of .22s and wind how much does rain affect the trajectory? Is there are testing been done on it?

Combat_Wombat wrote:While we are on the topic of .22s and wind how much does rain affect the trajectory? Is there are testing been done on it?
Rain makes up 0.2% of air volume during a 2-inches-of-rain-per-hour storm. (With 0.016 gallons of water falling through a cubic foot {7.5 gallons} of air per second.) It makes up far less than that during normal rain storms.
You have a 1:500 chance of hitting water in a one cubic foot air space (2"/hour) during a 1 second time interval.
Remember - The human brain makes us see things that are not necessarily real. It may look like a wall of water, but it's a bunch of individual rain drops. The streaking is a processing effect, done by our brains, so we have time to "see" the rain - rather than the brain only acknowledging it subconsciously.
To look at the odds of hitting water, let's look at only the bullet's path.
Imagine the bullet will travel through a "cylinder" of air.
With a .308" bullet, we need to find out how long this cylinder will be, to have a volume of one cubic foot.
1 Cubic Foot = 1,728 Cubic Inches
The volume of a cylinder is calculated as:
Pi*radius^2 (of circle)*length (of cylinder)
The radius of a .308" bullet is .154".
Pi(3.141)*.154^2 = 0.234 square inches.
1,728 cubic inches / 0.234 sq in = 7,382.5 inches
So, a .308" diameter cylinder needs to be 7,382.5 inches long to contain one cubic foot of volume. (7,382.5 inches / 12 inches per foot = 615.2 feet)
Which means.... your .308" bullet can travel 615 feet or 205 yards with a 1:500 chance of hitting water. Move closer to the target, at 100 yards; and you have a 1:1025 (0.0975%) chance of hitting water.
If it's only raining 1"/hour ... those odds go to 1:2050 (0.0488%) at 100 yards.
And that's not even figuring the adjustment for bullet flight time. Most bullets won't take a full second to reach the target. Therefore, they won't have a full second's worth of exposure, and the odds of hitting water are decreased even further.
For example (simple calculation with constant velocity):
A 2,100 fps bullet will reach a 100 yard target in 1/7 of a second (2,100 feet per second/300 feet = 1/7 second).
That means the odds of hitting water drop to a 1:7175 (0.0139%) chance of hitting water.
The odds are in your favor.
*Some of these numbers were rounded to certain decimal places.

Combat_Wombat wrote:While we are on the topic of .22s and wind how much does rain affect the trajectory? Is there are testing been done on it?
