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There is no "likely".

An accurate rifle,with good ammo,sporting a scope that has repeatable adjustments,will poke the group where one wishes,largely regardless of distance.

That assuming a guy that can shoot and favorable atmospheric conditions.

You'll freak out,like everyone does..........................


Stray Dog, I shoot a custom .300ultra wearing a Ziess Conquest 4.5X14 with target turrets. At our club the 600 yard range is restricted to people who've gone thru a qualifying process. I finally got off my dead arse this past month to get certified on the 600 range. They train you on range procedures, and want to make sure you and your equipment is up to the task. Your required to put 60 rounds in the black on a high power target (a 36" circle). Well, I keep hearing how 600 yards is suppose to be expotentialy more difficult (not 6 times) than 100 yard shooting. So anyways first thing they have you do is dial in your 600 yard come-up and shoot a target at 100 yards to confirm your data (they use a grid system set up for various cartridges- magnum rifle, service rifle, standard rifle). Now remember this is the first time I've shot past 300 yards, I confirm my come-up at 100, fire my spotter at 600, shooting prone off a bypod with a sand sock in the rear. First shot is in the 9 ring at 10:30 ( aprox 7 1/2" from the center of the target). Range officer gives me my correction, dial it in, next round drills the X dead center. Range officer takes a look thru his spotting scope, decides I don't need any more coaching, leaves me to finish my relay. I fire 9 more shots, 4 "X's" 5 10's, groups are centered on the edge of the "X" ring at 12:00, 5" group. I drilled the spotter they place in the hole 3 times when it was marking shots in the "X" ring. Might have been beginners luck, but as Stick says, you'll freak out <img src="/ubbthreads/images/graemlins/grin.gif" alt="" /> <img src="/ubbthreads/images/graemlins/cool.gif" alt="" />