As a much younger person, my sport of choice was small-bore rifle competition, at which, unlike math, I approached Olympic class. The equipment is a high precision .22 caliber rifle, firing a projectile with a muzzle velocity of 1080 feet per minute. Sights, either telescopic or ‘iron’, are mounted 2 inches above the barrel, centerline of sight to centerline of bore when parallel. Sighting adjustment is accomplished by turning either of two knobs, one for windage and one for elevation, which are graduated in one/sixth minute ‘clicks’. Common distances are 50 feet indoors and both 50 yards and 100 yards outdoors. If a rifle is zeroed perfectly for the 50 foot range, what adjustments, in clicks of elevation, must be made to score accurately at 50 yards and 100 yards? Assume both a no wind condition and constant projectile velocity.
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As a much younger person, my sport of choice was small-bore rifle competition, at which, unlike math, I approached Olympic class. The equipment is a high precision .22 caliber rifle, firing a projectile with a muzzle velocity of 1080 feet per minute. Sights, either telescopic or ‘iron’, are mounted 2 inches above the barrel, centerline of sight to centerline of bore when parallel. Sighting adjustment is accomplished by turning either of two knobs, one for windage and one for elevation, which are graduated in one/sixth minute ‘clicks’. Common distances are 50 feet indoors and both 50 yards and 100 yards outdoors. If a rifle is zeroed perfectly for the 50 foot range, what adjustments, in clicks of elevation, must be made to score accurately at 50 yards and 100 yards? Assume both a no wind condition and constant projectile velocity.
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