The welding/grinding in the garage probably wouldn’t do it any favors. I’m getting more and more intrigued by it but I think I’ll probably pass it along to someone who truly appreciates it. It just wouldn't get the appreciation it deserves in my house
I was helping at an e-waste even yesterday and came across an old Marantz 2265B. It was sealed up in the original box with the manual and appears to be in great shape. It powers up but I don’t have any speakers to hook up to it. I was thinking about taking it to a repair shop to have it looked...
Holy hell some people just love to complain. It is what it is. Either pay it or move on. Complaining about how they're 'sticking it to you' accomplishes nothing. If it pisses you off that bad, move there
Cool story man but why don’t you do everyone a favor and delete the unit from the post. It’s not like any LE tag needs anymore publicity
People can say what they want about other forums but at least they don’t allow this…
I’ve used Hornady and Applied ballistics apps and prefer AB. There’s lots of free ones if you’re on a desktop. Only one I’ve really messed with is Bergers. They should all spit out the same solution or close to the same anyways. Sight height and using the correct pressure common mistakes so be...
Do yourself and the animals a favor and invest some time into figuring it out on your own. None of this is very hard and unless you were dropped on your head too many times as a kid, it's not that hard to figure out. Put good information into any of the free ballistic calculators out there and...
I took your question as "Do I need to figure our how this stuff works or should I just estimate and call it good?"
No, you shouldn't estimate. You need to spend some time messing with a ballistics calculator to get a grasp on what you're trying to do
I would definitely put it below grade if it were me. There's a farm in Belt that has two of them and they are amazing. Never thought I'd see a banana or lemon tree growing in MT
I think this worth noting for hunters and guys that participate in ‘practical competitions’. Get a load that’s ’good enough’ and then spend your time/money practicing real world scenarios instead of trying to get another 1/4-1/2” out of your load.