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-   -   Shooting from an elevated position ? (https://www.huntingnet.com/forum/whitetail-deer-hunting/396529-shooting-elevated-position.html)

White Oak 06 12-21-2014 04:44 AM

Shooting from an elevated position ?
 
Taking aim on whitetails from 10 to 15 feet from the ground out to 200 yards , at those heights do you aim a little lower than normal ? (With a rifle )

Thanks......

Oldtimr 12-21-2014 05:20 AM

I have never changed my point of aim with a rifle when in a tree stand.

White Oak 06 12-21-2014 05:28 AM

Thanks oldtimr , I shot at a doe out to 150 to 175 yards in low light and I missed.
I could see her and my rifle is on for 200 yards.

Oldtimr 12-21-2014 06:06 AM

Unfortunately, sometimes we all miss. Low light can also affect the way we shoot.

Mojotex 12-21-2014 06:33 AM

No. At that shallow an angle no need to adjust. Hold dead-on as you are sighted in for and let 'er go. We all miss sooner or later. I agree with "Oldtimr" ... very low light was probably the culprit.

White Oak 06 12-21-2014 08:19 AM

Thanks guys !!!!

MZS 12-23-2014 04:46 AM

At that range, you are at about 1.15 degrees elevation, which is probably a lot less change in elevation that most typical shots at closer range with even very small hills.

Here is the trigonometry: tangent (1.15 degrees) = 4 yds / 200 yds = opposite/adjacent

Double Naught Spy 12-23-2014 05:51 AM

A couple of the primary stands I hunt have their rests 14-15' off the ground. Feeders at the stands are 45, 85, and 100 yards. No POA correction necessary for POI. Whatever difference that occurs is inside of normal group sizes and so is unrecognizable.

Brandon_SPC 12-23-2014 09:31 AM

Rifle never have changed POA now a bow is a different story DON'T use your 20 yard pin for a deer that is about 5 yards away. Figured that out the hard way this year.

Nomercy448 12-23-2014 09:55 AM

Unless you're shooting up or down a mountainside, elevation angulation doesn't affect the ToF enough to make enough difference to worry about for hunting.

There are a lot of variables that figure into the geometry of angular shooting, but the simplified version is to simply multiply the line of sight measured range by the cosine of the angle (line of sight = hypotenuse, not "opposite"), hence why a lot of long range shooters use cosine angle indicators on the side of their rifles. For example, if you rangefind a deer at 400yrds, but it's 45degrees down a mountain side, it's actually only 283yrds away: cosine(45) = x/400, 400*cos(45) = 283yrds (cos(45) = .707).

If you're on flat land, then the time of flight difference when shooting at high angle close shots, the angular deviation (moa shift) won't be enough to matter. When shooting long shots, the deviation is too small such that the cosine of the angle will almost 1, so the degree of hold will be negligible.

Angle only matters in the hills.


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