Quote from: Fillmoregandt on March 17, 2023, 12:40:26 PM
Crow, could you explain the mid bead/figure 8 a little more? When you're looking down the barrel and are stacking the two beads over the bird's head, are you using the bottom (mid) bead as your POA? Or covering the POI with the middle of the 8?
I'm sure shooting it a few times will determine the correct answer, but just want to get an idea of where to begin.
As g8rvet said, this forum discussion is great for navigating the patterning process
The front bead is always the front sight, and is used as POA
the mid bead is taking the place of a rear sight, if you are shooting low you either need to lower the front sight or raise the rear sight. By setting the front bead on top of the rear sight (mid bead) you are raising your POA. The sight picture you get when setting the front bead on top of the mid bead resembles the number eight 8, you are putting the top of the eight where you want the center of you pattern to go.
If you can't get enough raise in elevation and are still shooting low you have a couple of options, #1, if you normally aim by putting the front bead at the base of the neck or mid neck you may have to aim at the head which should have the 10" covering the head and most of the neck. If shooting at the base of the neck is ingrained into your muscle memory, making yourself aim at the head when the heat is on can be hard for some people.
#2, you could also have a bigger (taller) front bead installed in the mid bead position which will give you more raise in elevation.
#3 if you don't already have a mid bead hole drilled and tapped you can stick on a temporary bead, shoot the gun, if center of pattern is too low slide mid bead a little closer to front bead. This will raise your POI and you can combine this with option #2
This is what I did with my BW.
To keep track of moving POI you don't need to shoot turkey loads for this or choke filing. I would buy a box of good quality trap/target loads, Fed gold medal, Top gun or Win. AA.
Once you have shot your turkey load and see how far off it is for POAvsPOI, shoot a trap load at 15-20 yds so you can clearly see a dense core and see where it is compared to your turkey load, now you have a basis for comparison and can keep roughing in your adjustments with the cheaper loads.
all target loads (or turkey loads) will not shoot to the same poi, that is why you want to start with a full box and only shoot them when doing the sighting in process.