B
brikman
Guest
Has anyone here ever tryed a Polarizer lens filter on there scope to help with the Mirage i cant seem to find any info .
fart in your face when you pull the trigger
The only way I've figured out to really see how much the mirage is moving the target image is to use the same effect to move another light path. Mirage makes you shoot at the wrong spot by bending the path of the light carrying the image of the target to your scope. To see how much it's been moved - mount a laser on your scope and zero both at the target distance in zero mirage conditions. Any mirage that moves the image should also move the laser on the way down to the target. The POA/POI should then always be 1/2 way between where the bull looks to be and the laser spot.
Vibe,The only way I've figured out to really see how much the mirage is moving the target image is to use the same effect to move another light path. Mirage makes you shoot at the wrong spot by bending the path of the light carrying the image of the target to your scope. To see how much it's been moved - mount a laser on your scope and zero both at the target distance in zero mirage conditions. Any mirage that moves the image should also move the laser on the way down to the target. The POA/POI should then always be 1/2 way between where the bull looks to be and the laser spot.
The only way I've figured out to really see how much the mirage is moving the target image is to use the same effect to move another light path. Mirage makes you shoot at the wrong spot by bending the path of the light carrying the image of the target to your scope. To see how much it's been moved - mount a laser on your scope and zero both at the target distance in zero mirage conditions. Any mirage that moves the image should also move the laser on the way down to the target. The POA/POI should then always be 1/2 way between where the bull looks to be and the laser spot.
Vibe,True. there is an issue with the "standard" optics on many laser pointers, as well as the natural beam divergence just from traveling through air. As I recall reading somewhere, the best optics in the world still result in a laser "spot" projected from the Earth onto the Moon as being larger than a football field. But so long as the beam stays essentially round, it should still be able to indicate the off-center nature - particularly when compared to target bull rings. But then again, I'm sure the optics on your lasers were better than the few I've tried.
KeithVibe,
The laser idea is intriguing, but I must be missing something. If the laser travels the same optical path as the line of sight, and wavelength effects are neglected, because Snell's law is reversible, the laser would be refracted the same as the target image. In other words, if you line up the cross hairs and the laser on the bull without mirage, and then the mirage starts, the laser image and the target image would dance around in lock step, which doesn't help. If the laser is mounted to the side or above the scope, it will travel a different optical path, but with unknown differences from the line of sight, which also doesn't help.
Now since refraction is wavelength dependent, it is possible that by using lasers with two different wavelengths that one could calculate the refraction of the line of sight from the difference in refraction of the two laser images. I don't know for sure, it would take some digging into the equations to see if this would yield a solution.
Clever idea, regardless.
Keith
Keith
The laser beam is making 2 trips - one down and one back. Mirage will affect it in both directions equally. This will cause the beam to hit the target in a different spot - coming back, you are correct and both will be bounced around equally. So far there is only one scope maker that mounts a laser designator inside a rifle scope - it's a "sister company" to NcStar, but they only go up to 9x that I could find.
David
Keith,
I seem to remember that astronomical observatories use what is called AO (Adaptive Optics) in conjunction with lasers to correct for atmospheric distortions and it’s done with almost unimaginable accuracy, but that particular system won’t be installed in my tunnel anytime soon. LOL
Do you have any familiarity with that system? Or, is it completely irrelevant to this discussion?
Landy
Your competitors will love you if you shoot that way. You will have the lowest score of the day.Vibe,
OK, let's see if I am getting this right: If the laser is rigidly mounted on the bench and is initially pointed at the bull, then after the mirage starts, all we have to do is shoot at the laser dot regardless of where the bull appears to be.
If the laser always stayed in the center of the crosshairs - what would be the point? But since the mirage will throw where the laser spot hits the target away from the crosshairs - now you have some real feedback as to where the bullseye "really" is.However, if the laser is fixed to the scope instead and initially (without mirage) aligned with the crosshairs, then because the optical paths are exactly the same, the laser always appears at the center of the crosshairs, even as the bull dances around. The laser doesn't help in this case. In fact, it provides nothing more than an illuminated dot at the center of the crosshairs.
The laser could be fixed in the scope by a gyroscope reference, I suppose.
Cheers,
Keith
Your competitors will love you if you shoot that way. You will have the lowest score of the day.
If the laser always stayed in the center of the crosshairs - what would be the point?
But since the mirage will throw where the laser spot hits the target away from the crosshairs - now you have some real feedback as to where the bullseye "really" is.