Hot Silhouette in South Oz
Posted: Sat Feb 07, 2009 1:35 pm
Hello All,
I suppose some of you good folk have been watching the weather lately and noticed that the poor souls (me included) confined to South Australia & Adelaide environs have been copping a bit of a hiding with some heat. Not that I mind a bit of warm weather but it is hard to focus on silhouettes when the sweat keeps running down into your eyes. Another minus is the fact that your poor old barrel is just as hot when you start your next detail as when you finished your last one half an hour before. Not to mention the burns from standing black targets that have been knocked over onto the parched earth and been superheated by old sol, I have now learnt to carry a pair of gloves, which saddens me greatly as the wearing of gloves for manual labour always brings the phrase "blouse" to my mind, maybe my hands are getting soft. As the Viscount of Kent would say "take a spoonful of cement and harden the f*#&k up".
The good news was that I couldn't find any significant change in my rifles points of impact at the various targets, that is with the .375 and the .32/20. I was quite surprised by this as I expected, particularly with the .375 at the longer ranges to have to make some minor changes to sight settings, not so.
I would think our very good Australian smokeless powders have much to do with this as they are double based and show very little change through a great variety of temperatures. They were designed for these conditions.
I would like to point out that at my last 4 shoots the temperature has been between 40 & 45 degrees celcius (for those working by the old scale 37-38C is about 100F). Ground temperatures obviously would have been much higher.
Adds up to good training for Whittington I imagine?
Regards to all
Outback Mick
I suppose some of you good folk have been watching the weather lately and noticed that the poor souls (me included) confined to South Australia & Adelaide environs have been copping a bit of a hiding with some heat. Not that I mind a bit of warm weather but it is hard to focus on silhouettes when the sweat keeps running down into your eyes. Another minus is the fact that your poor old barrel is just as hot when you start your next detail as when you finished your last one half an hour before. Not to mention the burns from standing black targets that have been knocked over onto the parched earth and been superheated by old sol, I have now learnt to carry a pair of gloves, which saddens me greatly as the wearing of gloves for manual labour always brings the phrase "blouse" to my mind, maybe my hands are getting soft. As the Viscount of Kent would say "take a spoonful of cement and harden the f*#&k up".
The good news was that I couldn't find any significant change in my rifles points of impact at the various targets, that is with the .375 and the .32/20. I was quite surprised by this as I expected, particularly with the .375 at the longer ranges to have to make some minor changes to sight settings, not so.
I would think our very good Australian smokeless powders have much to do with this as they are double based and show very little change through a great variety of temperatures. They were designed for these conditions.
I would like to point out that at my last 4 shoots the temperature has been between 40 & 45 degrees celcius (for those working by the old scale 37-38C is about 100F). Ground temperatures obviously would have been much higher.
Adds up to good training for Whittington I imagine?
Regards to all
Outback Mick