Rifles. That's the hunter's strongest weapon.

It is one of the best weapons available to mankind, both in hunting and on the battlefield.

A different amount of gunpowder than a shotgun. The fin of that power is the speed of the bullet.

Compared to a shotgun about 400 m per second, the energy of a rifle bullet over 800 m is several times more powerful than a shotgun.

Shotguns are depicted in cartoons, games, and movies as very powerful, but what you actually think of possessing them and trying to shoot them can actually be "not a big deal". It's a low-powered gun that only gets permission to possess and can be the first to have it, and it's less dangerous for beginners to have it.

I would shoot a BB shotgun (4.5mm) into the fox extermination, but it doesn't really make the fox bloody. You don't even die instantly. One shot in, one stopping, and then another to stop is normal. Where did you hit it later? You don't know unless you try to pull the hair out of the blockage. To that extent.

Rifle ammunition is made of brass with sturdy pods, right?

How about a shotgun for that? Isn't it a pod plastic?

That means there's only enough gunpowder in there. It used to be a shotgun, a paper pod. It's ballpaper. There's no way a shotgun is more powerful than a rifle.

Its hitting precision hives, which subside within a few centimeters even at a shooting distance exceeding 300 m of the rifle, are found in spiral rifles carved into the barrel of the gun.

That's why you can stabilize and fly like a comma by spinning and flying bullets.

My shotgun also spins with a half rifle on a sabotage slug, but its hitting accuracy is different keta.

But no weapon will be as difficult to choose from as a rifle.

Virtually all shotguns are hunting guns. Whereas it is the perfect gun for hunting, rifles vary widely in both performance and purpose of use, from shooting competitions to military assault rifles.

That said, I'm a hunter. That's a shotgun option.

This is my first rifle, so I want to avoid too large a caliber of stuff. I wonder if the ammunition is extremely expensive. Mm-hmm. Distressing.

308 Winchester or 30-06 Springfield if classic?

Sika, that's enough for boars.

Anyone who shoots a higma also uses 300 Winchester Magnum.

Larger calibers than this are for Alaska, Canada, Africa...

You're still ahead of us to deal with such a big beast.

Hunters don't think about which guns to use.

Think about which prey you will acquire, and choose the ammunition you will use for it.

Which gun to buy is then. The gun has a lower priority than the bullet.

Both 308, 30-06 and 300 magnums are the names of rifle bullets.

Yeah, let's make it 308.

It's the first rifle. This ammunition for hunting is also recommended for the world's most popular rifle beginners. Hokkaido gun stores do not deal with bullets weaker than this. This is the least amount of power I need.

It is also famous as a 7.62 mm NATO ammunition for military use, but it was later that it was adopted as a military ammunition, a small ammunition originally developed by Winchester for hunting on the assumption that this would cover all of the wildlife within the United States.

Smokeless gunpowder has been improved, and it's a post-war rifle bullet that even a short pod can gain enough power.

So as for military ammunition, the 308 Winchester and the long 30-06 Springfield of the 1906 drug casket are pretty much the same in power and ballistics. This is the same because if this changes dramatically, as an army, we will start training again and the manual will be replaced in total.

However, 30-06 is now more powerful than 308 for hunting because it also uses improved gunpowder.

Now I want to stop thinking from my skill that I'm too powerful or too expensive a bullet than 308.

In fact, these three ammunitions are all of the same 30 caliber (7.62 mm) caliber. In order of 308, 30-06 and 300 mag, the drugpods are thicker and larger, with different amounts of gunpowder.

What to do with the warhead......

I knew this would be a Barnes warhead.

Since the ban on lead bullets in Hokkaido, all bullets have been made of copper. Copper bullets have been used. Little lighter than a metal jacket coated with lead bullets in copper. As a result, the misconception that "copper bullets do not hit" spread from the hunters who initially switched to this bullet.

In fact, the warhead weight changed, so it became a faster bullet and ballistics just changed.

With more people using it, I've come up with an assessment that says copper bullets are actually more powerful than lead bullets.

Originally, the development purpose of the Barnes warhead, which is all made of copper, was to achieve a more powerful bullet.

Lead bullets are too soft and when they hit prey, they fall apart in your body.

Because of this, I can't use that energy when I use it with high-speed ammunition such as magnum ammunition.

The copper bullet is stiff and durable, so even if you shoot it out at high speed and hit the prey, the warhead doesn't fall apart and the tip remains crushed, pushing through the prey's body and reaching the steeple. This one's more capable of killing. So Hokkaido hunters, who initially assumed on their own that they wouldn't get "copper bullets" and hated using copper bullets, are now convinced to use copper bullets as well.

And I'm talking about the hunting society seniors.

In the morning, I sit out my magic bag in my inn room.

Put a piece of gold in a magic bag and think "Burns Warhead 308 Winchester".

A box of twenty rounds came out.

All right, you can buy it! Now you don't have to worry about bullets.

Change of nine silver coins. Three pieces of silver coins a box, and if it's Japanese yen, I think it's 125 yen a shot.

... It's cheaper than a shotgun sabot slug... That's three bucks a shot.

Iron cannon bullets don't change the price due to their size and power.

The more massively made and commonly out there, the cheaper. Even small-calibre rare bullets can be expensive, right?

Next, put thirty gold coins in and finally buy the gun body!

"Remington M700 Stainless Steel!

Please! I'll take care of the fine part numbers and stuff!

... Shh.

The magic bag gets heavy.

He's out! Open the bag.

It's a strange sight to see at all times. In a regular yellow bag, a long gun goes deep if you peek inside...

Plastic gunbeds in stainless steel, silver glowing barrels and machine parts when removed. Bolt action rifle.

It's a Remington M700...... My grandfather had it.

Grandpa's was black dyed, not stainless steel, and the gun bed was walnut material, though.

Of course, the fact that it has become stainless steel and plastic has led to dramatic improvements in weather resistance and durability. It's okay to get wet in the water. If it was a different world, it would be me.

Stainless steel on an iron cannon doesn't mean it won't rust like a dish because it doesn't seem to have a lot of rust free ingredients. Some care is required. Let's remember, shall we?

Flip the bag.

Twenty-two gold coins fell. That means eight gold coins. Eighty thousand yen!

That's cheap, America!

Scope mount and scope next.

"Remington M700 scope mount 30mm, Nikon 16x - 50mm caliber scope!

Seven gold coins in both. The price of the scope is irrelevant to the gun......

This is still cheap. Nikon's scope is great.

The scope of the rifle is what seniors so hard told me I couldn't perform unless I bought something higher than a rifle.

Optical products are made in Japan after all. Cost-effective.

The finest products from overseas scope manufacturers may actually be made in Japan.

All Nikon rifle scopes feature long eye relief.

In other words, the distance between the eye and the eyepiece is long.

So you don't have to worry first about the injury of bumping your eyes into the scope even if you get a rifle recoil.

Even in action movies like America, there are occasional scenes where you watch your eyes stick to the scope's eyepiece. It's not a microscope or binoculars, so if you shoot it like that, the scope will stick in your eyes and you'll go blind.

If it's an air gun, that's fine, but not without a minimum distance between the scope of the rifle and your eyes of 10 cm or more.

I know hunters who buy weird scopes, bump their eyes into scopes, get hurt, and have hardened their erections ever since and never get their arms up.

I'm a Nikon rifle scope, I recommend it. [M]

Assemble while cowling to attach scope.

Finally a rifle...... My rifle. My rifle.

And now I'm in front of the front door of one of my people.

"Wow. But it's smarter than the one I had before."

Yeah, compared to a shotgun, you're loose, and you might look unreliable, Saran.

"But, you know, it's more than twice as powerful and twice as far-reaching as it was before."

"Heh..."

I think I'm happy, and Saran's having a good time.

"I'm sorry... I even used fifteen gold coins"

"That's the amount I and Singh could earn in a week. Don't worry about it at all."

"... thanks"

Yes with tears.

Some of you might think it weird that I use a Remington M700 in a different world, which is extremely, normally, old-fashioned, and cheap (...) stuff (...).

Assault rifles for military guns, sniper rifles, even cooler guns, more high-performance guns.

But, you know, a hunting gun is, after all, the best way to use it for hunting, because it's been used for a long time and it's still being used, and it keeps being chosen by many hunters. This is the best thing.

Oh, my God, a hunting (...) gun, that's about it.

Until this point, Grandpa's choice was not wrong. I think I'll make it.

That's why Grandpa used it. Now you're right.

I couldn't inherit my grandfather's rifle. [M]

There is nothing I can do about the legal wall that without 10 years of experience in the use of shotguns, there will be no permits. Grandpa's rifle was picked up by the police and turned into an abandoned gun.

... It was old. Even the hunting association didn't have anyone to give it to.

The M700 has all the major ammunition in it. From the 22-calibre Vermint to the African Beast opponent's large-calibre Magnum for shooting the Playley Dog.

Autos have a lot of dedicated designs for certain ammunition, but bolt-action rifles don't matter, so you can shoot any bullet just to change the design a little.

Whether you need a more powerful rifle in the future to replace it, the way you use it is a trick. The good thing about the M700 is that you can keep using the gun you're used to. The variety of calibers is knotty. It's nice to know that even with guns of various calibers by application, they can all be unified in the Remington M700.

Performance first, utility first, and cuckoo second.

"I'm going to try and shoot you!

"I'm coming too"

No, because we're just gonna scope it together, Saran.

"I'm just adjusting. I'm not hunting. You can rest today, or you can go shopping."

"Go. Sounds interesting."

"Yeah, well, come with me"

When you come to the East Gate, you walk in, and the countryside is gone, and it becomes wilderness.

You have a rock. Do you want to go over there?

Write a cross on the rock with a spray can.

Measure the distance more or less in steps and more accurately away from the rock with Nikon's laser range finder.

This is a golf product, but it's convenient to measure the distance up to 500 meters.

Fit 50m. I guess this is how it goes first.

Lay the cloth on the ground, place the backpack, put the M700 tip there and put the gun in the down position.

You can pull the bolt up and back and pull the bolt out back by pressing the bolt stop release located above the trigger guard.

You can see a round hole in the barrel when you look at the gun from behind in this condition.

Peek into the barrel here and leave the cross sprayed on the rock visible at the center of the gunpoint. Then take a peek at the scope and see if the crosshairs are off.

It is a method called boresitting (* 1).

Yeah, it's more or less central. I didn't mean it's a big deviation here. That means guns, scope mounts, and scopes are accurately built. Nice.

Set the bolts and turn the bolts forward and down by placing Burns' 308 in the waste pocket (ejection port).

"Saran, put this on."

"What?"

"Earplugs. Because it sounds amazing."

"Uh-huh."

"Look... here's how..."

Let me try. Can't it work? Ha ha.

I'll pinch a long ear next to Saran and push the earplug in.

"Ahhh......"

Don't make weird noises.

"I'll shoot you -!"

"Go ahead -!

When shooting a gun, shooting a gun on top of something is called commissioned shooting. Naturally there will be less braking and more hitting accuracy, so when shooting, you should consign whatever you can to use, whether standing wood or fence.

However, even in that case, the first platform must always be put on the palm of your hand.

You don't have to grip it. Just give it a ride.

The landing changes when you put it on something hard or soft. Actual guns have recoil. So put your hands on what you want to consign and put a gun on top of it.

Failure to do so will result in a change of landing when you shoot with no consignment and only your hands supported.

It is strictly forbidden to shoot a gun directly into something structure.

The worst part is getting the barrel directly onto something. You can't have that. When you fire, the barrel vibrates, so you jump. If we're going to get him on board, we should at least put him on the first stage, and the barrel must be free of anything he's touching.

I put my left hand on the bag I left, and I put the gun tip on the palm of my hand.

I put two legs (bipot) on the rifle and adjusted the scope on full consignment, but when I took that gun to the hunt, it came off - or something like that, no one did this...

If you adjusted the scope with a bipot, it can mean that you won't hit it if you don't use a bipot when shooting with a hunt. Sniper people do that without exception.

Do-n!

There's a hell of a big noise, the sand curls up, the scope's vision dazzles with an orange flame, and the shock comes like being kicked in the shoulder.

Well, shall we go check it out?

"... that sounds amazing. Even if I'm sorry, it could be bigger than Sin's."

"Because it's powerful."

Something's wrong with you two talking a little loud.

Did you deviate about five centimeters up and two centimeters to the right?

Adjust the turret (* 2) of the scope with the kathi, kathi, kathi, and.

It says on the turret that 1 click = 1/4 in - 100 yd means it moves 1/4 in (6.35 mm) for 100 yards (91m).

Remember that 50m is 3.5mm a click and turns it 14 clicks in the DOWN direction. The left and right were on the right, so I think it's about five in the L direction.

The scope may also say 1 click = 1/4 MOA.

MOA means Minute of Angles. Minutes are the same as minutes of time. When you say it at an angle, it means an angle that divides a degree by 60. That's the same as an hour being 60 minutes.

One kachi means one sixtieth of a degree at an angle, another quarter.

In fact, 100 yd = 1/4 in and the amount of travel is virtually the same.

American scopes are 100yd denoted, European scopes have a lot of MOA denoted.

Next, take a 100m distance, another shot!

Do-n!

Now about 2 cm down and 1 cm to the right.

Remember it's 100m and 7mm per click. It says on the turret from the beginning that it is Nikon 1 click = 7mm/100m.

Three clicks in the UP direction and one click in the L direction.

Next, 150 m away......

"Hey, hey, Sin!

"Hmm?"

"You hit it so far away?!

"Yeah."

Saran surprises you. That's right.

Be careful not to have parallax when aiming with the scope. In other words, you have to make sure you have eyes in the center of the scope so that all the outer circumferences of the scope are visible in full circles and you shoot them. If this is off, the landing shifts. Specifically, I mean don't shoot with the statue missing somewhere up, down, left and right of the scope and darkened to the three-day moon type.

The way you aim doesn't mean that this is the right answer, because it varies from person to person, but in my case, I will arrange for the statue of the scope to go up and down vertically exactly as I breathe. You can't have a gun diagonal at this time or move up or down in a diagonal direction. I make sure that, and then I look at the timing and hold my breath at the moment the cross line matches the target, doing the trick of gently pulling the trigger. I think most people naturally do that the moment of firing means holding their breath.

Do-n!

Do-n!

Do-n!

I'll fire three shots.

I went to see the three places landed......

It may be troublesome to go back and forth to the target because there is no spotting scope......

It's landing on a distorted triangular shape. The size of the triangle is about 5 cm.

Is it like this when it's my first rifle? [M]

Experience with air rifles and sabot slugs lives on. Excellent.

With the center of this triangle as the point of landing, the left and right are perfect.

Is the top and bottom about 2 cm down?

150m would be 1cm per click.

Go back and turn it two clicks in the UP direction.

Now you will have been able to zero in at 150m.

Will my skill be the most commonly used distance around here?

Then change the distance and keep shooting.

0cm up and down at 50m.

on 3 cm at 100 m.

Up and down 0 cm at 150 m.

Under 7cm at 200m.

You'll land 20 cm below at 250 meters.

That means when you aim at 250 meters, you aim at 20 cm above the target.

Is this the limit of my skill?

The scale is on the cross line of the scope, so you should decide up and down with that in mind.

Load 250 m one after the other.

Yeah, the scope fits just fine when I set it up twelve times. That's how the Nikon scale is done properly.

Remember 150m, 200m and 250m from the top.

I'm not sure about the 300m. With my arm, I can only expect a miserable hit.

"End!"

"The rocks are worn out...... wow, power. And the distance is terrible."

"Hey. Isn't that amazing?

……

I swell and pun my cheeks in a grumpy mood.

What girls do in different worlds is a lot......

"Um, did you notice anything?

"You're gonna lose my turn"

Uh... so?

"That's not true. A weapon that sounds so ridiculous, you'll find where you shot it right from. Saran's bow is definitely more advantageous when hiding and hunting. Think of me as the only one who can use something like this..."

Nikah.

Yeah. Girls still smile. It was simple and helpful.

- - Author annotation - -

* 1. Bore sighting

How to align a scope or other aimer with a target that peeks from behind and can be seen through the hole.

The new scope is not aimed, of course, so you'd better install the scope and do this first because shooting at close range doesn't hit the target and sometimes you don't know which one to adjust to.

In actual shooting, there's recoil, and the bullet is pulled by gravity and falls, so this method alone can't fit. Method to do only to avoid taking the first shot off target.

* 2. Turret

The fine-tuning knob of the scope. Usually, if the landing shifts downward, it can be corrected by turning it in the UP direction, and if it shifts to the left, it can be turned in the R direction. The hunting scope usually has a cover to prevent it from spinning even when touched. I mean, once we fit in, we don't mess around anymore, it's normal to just change where we aim. Too often, a guy who is a tactical type and mumbles can't turn it without pulling it, or some kind of locking mechanism. The type that goes around just touching it... well I don't know, I can't recommend it in hunting or in action for shooting competitions.

Many have the ability to loosen the turret lock and keep the scale to zero when the scope alignment is finished. This type may be useful because you can tease it right back, but don't mess with the combined scope once, it's much quicker and more operational to correct the coarse points with just the scale engraved on the crosshairs.

Cheap scopes don't count on turret scales at all, and they don't hit the same spot when you tease them back. The difference between a real and a replica can also be seen around it.

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