I attended the Sequim rondy this weekend and had a great time! I thought I would share and experience in dialing in my .50 Cal Lyman Plains Rifle.
We had a 100 yard paper target of a bear. I had shot my gun in that morning at 25 yards about as well as I have ever had it dialed in. So, I loaded up and fired my 5 rounds. they hit the bear's feet, about a foot or more below the center of mass. My aiming point was his back.
So, when an opportunity came to help a friend who is not very ambulatory take his gun and stuff to the range I helped and took mine too. After setting him up I loaded up with 100 grains, vs. my usual 65 grains, and shot 5 rounds at a spare target, firing with the top of the front post at the top of his back.
When I went up to get his target all five of my rounds had missed. OK, I knew they had not gone below the target, right? So, I loaded up with 100 grains again and fired at his feet. I have never seen such a perfect hole in a piece of paper, and it was exactly in the center of the bear's body, a kill shot, about 12 inches above the point of aim (I have a picture of the hole in the target and my friend as a witness!). At least now I know where the gun shoots at at 100 yards.
My thought is that with 100 grains at 100 yards it is still climbing? Any thought? It was an interesting experiment in shooting.