Reading Wind with Optics | Long-Range Rifle Shooting with Ryan Cleckner

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  • Опубликовано: 13 сен 2024
  • Former Army Ranger sniper team leader Ryan Cleckner discusses how to read wind conditions by using optics.
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Комментарии • 162

  • @AccumbensNucleus
    @AccumbensNucleus Год назад +6

    Finally a wind reading video that's not a Kestrel reading video. Thanks!

  • @bobbygonzon5428
    @bobbygonzon5428 6 лет назад +92

    His teaching method makes me more interested in this sport. Thank you, Ryan.

    • @danielmattos2813
      @danielmattos2813 3 года назад +1

      Sport?

    • @bobbygonzon5428
      @bobbygonzon5428 3 года назад +2

      @@danielmattos2813 yep.

    • @raphael8549
      @raphael8549 3 года назад +2

      @@danielmattos2813 this is one of the most famous sports, Boss.

    • @thisguy7228
      @thisguy7228 2 года назад

      this isn’t a sport

    • @Lavi-Aemilia-Astori
      @Lavi-Aemilia-Astori 2 года назад

      @@thisguy7228 "an activity involving physical exertion and skill in which an individual or team competes against another or others for entertainment."
      I am pretty sure shooting can be a sport.

  • @alexmook6786
    @alexmook6786 Год назад +2

    Ryan is a treasure. He is so engaging on how he presents his information. He is the only one I trust to learn from.

  • @patrickgjorven7832
    @patrickgjorven7832 3 года назад +7

    I love how simple, practical and to the point your lessons and tips are. Thank you!

  • @thormusique
    @thormusique 6 лет назад +35

    Another excellent video, thanks! I always learn so much from your videos. And thanks to your book (and lots of practice), my LRS skills have increased dramatically. I love your no-nonsense, practical approach of how you very simply present the problems and the solutions, without a lot of jargon and tacticool nonsense.

  • @dwaynerussell9711
    @dwaynerussell9711 3 года назад +2

    Ryan is one of the best teachers out there!

  • @trashpanda2396
    @trashpanda2396 6 лет назад +18

    Love this guy. Going to buy your book now if it is half as good as the few videos I've seen it will not disappoint!

    • @Wyo2Wis
      @Wyo2Wis 4 года назад +4

      You will not be disappointed with Ryan's book.

    • @PCQLJ
      @PCQLJ 3 года назад +6

      The book purchase will NOT disappoint. It is one of those you read a couple of times and then keep it close by as a reference.

  • @kevinsmith9726
    @kevinsmith9726 4 года назад +6

    Magic . Very smart man. I respect his attitude in all videos very much. Thank you. Canada

  • @ricardoantonio5085
    @ricardoantonio5085 4 года назад +1

    Best discussion on reading the wind ever!

  • @charlesxchaves
    @charlesxchaves 4 года назад +4

    Excellent tip Ryan, I've recently started taking an interest in long range shooting and your videos are certainly very educational. You are one of the best teachers on youtube, I hope you do more of these

  • @kapperoutdoors
    @kapperoutdoors 6 лет назад +4

    Love your stuff Ryan! Thanks! Kapper

  • @inkink-yv5tz
    @inkink-yv5tz 5 лет назад +3

    Thanks alot Ryan, my son wants to be a spec ops sniper & these videos have given us a very practical starting point. Thank you sir!!!

  • @snakedike
    @snakedike 4 года назад +2

    Working slowly through your book. Thanks for the wind tip.

  • @kamiltamiola2066
    @kamiltamiola2066 2 года назад +1

    This is one of the best videos on the subject matter out there. Thank you very much Ryan.

  • @BBQDad463
    @BBQDad463 4 года назад +2

    Thank you for teaching this very valuable technique.

  • @cornydad
    @cornydad 6 лет назад +3

    Great tip that can only come from experience

  • @toddb930
    @toddb930 5 лет назад +1

    Lots of good information in that little segment. Thanks Ryan!

  • @bisonuberti
    @bisonuberti 6 лет назад +2

    Just awesome indeed. Shoot lots and stay safe.

  • @atvfarmari5129
    @atvfarmari5129 6 лет назад +5

    Grate video, keep them coming, and thank you

  • @waynehajek6346
    @waynehajek6346 Год назад

    Excellent demonstration of down range wind estimation! Thank you!

  • @jacobstaten2366
    @jacobstaten2366 6 лет назад +10

    "Hey man, would you mind standing next to that banner over there? Yeah, the one that's blowing. It's for a picture. You'll see the flash."

    • @CosmicTheCowDad
      @CosmicTheCowDad 10 месяцев назад +2

      “You’ll see the flash.”💀 🤣🤣🤣

  • @sean19
    @sean19 2 года назад

    Ryan , I love your videos . You have passion for the sport and thats why I like your channel. Thanks for all your hard work in the military .

  • @mikecurrie4914
    @mikecurrie4914 5 лет назад +6

    Thanks for the info Ryan. What power spotting scope would you recommend .

  • @Patriot41776
    @Patriot41776 2 года назад

    Absolutely brilliant! Thank you! I want MOAR!

  • @kirkwagner461
    @kirkwagner461 2 года назад

    Turning to get wind direction is news to me. Thanks!

  • @terrysharp4376
    @terrysharp4376 7 месяцев назад

    Very interesting. Thank you

  • @artandazola
    @artandazola 9 месяцев назад

    A short lesson on the high pressure and low pressure areas around the projectile as it travels may impart some easy to learn long range shooting lessons. With this in mind you may be able to determine some of vertical component associated with a horizontal wind. In addition to the horizontal component.

  • @jerryavalos9610
    @jerryavalos9610 4 года назад +1

    Practical hands on advice in the field. Too many people are into gadgets.

  • @BobJones-zw3ui
    @BobJones-zw3ui Год назад

    Fantastic-one of my top five videos this year‼️‼️💥👍👍👍👍👍 I love the practical knowledge that you provided to us. And yes, I do have your orange book 😊😊

  • @chuckdriver7741
    @chuckdriver7741 4 года назад +1

    Excellent information, delivered with clarity. 🇺🇸🗽🦅

  • @MrRanggong
    @MrRanggong 2 года назад

    Nice and concise without a lot of chatter. thank you.

  • @JimFleming1953
    @JimFleming1953 6 лет назад +1

    Great job as always, Ryan! 👍👍👍🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸👍👍👍

  • @the4hunters
    @the4hunters 11 месяцев назад

    Wow, just wow 🔥💪

  • @jerrycoon2797
    @jerrycoon2797 2 года назад

    Simple and very effective, thank you.

  • @mr.h8660
    @mr.h8660 4 года назад

    This helped so much--thank you for giving approachable information.

  • @craigr6763
    @craigr6763 6 лет назад +1

    Thanks for sharing your knowledge! I would love to shoot with you for a day. I feel I would learn a ton

  • @beauwatson6893
    @beauwatson6893 Год назад

    Great video, Ryan. I certainly appreciate your videos.

  • @shutthegate8232
    @shutthegate8232 6 лет назад +1

    You sir, are a legend!

  • @nbragtop
    @nbragtop 3 года назад

    Great teaching video ! Thank you.

  • @42N8_1
    @42N8_1 5 лет назад

    Best explanation on the net.

  • @JonCresswellUk
    @JonCresswellUk 3 года назад

    Clever stuff!! I’ll try this next time I’m out

  • @bluesfanman1
    @bluesfanman1 5 лет назад

    Priceless lesson.

  • @williamkennedy3837
    @williamkennedy3837 2 года назад

    Wow! Sounds real to me.

  • @mcshunting7587
    @mcshunting7587 6 лет назад +1

    Great great advise!! Thank you very much !!

  • @johnschmidt6089
    @johnschmidt6089 3 года назад

    Here is a question that a lot of people ask: If you are reading the mirage through a rifle scope instead of a spotting scope, and the rifle scope has a parallax adjustment on the side of the scope, do you use the parallax adjustment to back off on the focus and bring the target out of focus so as to see the mirage? Or do you use the magnification power adjustment, say for example back off from 25x down to 15x? Which do you use? I do it either way. But many people have scopes that don't have parallax adjustments.

  • @Xandrosi
    @Xandrosi 6 лет назад

    Straightforward! Thank you for the great video!

  • @marcosfranca5317
    @marcosfranca5317 2 года назад

    Excellent! Thank you!

  • @joewebster3768
    @joewebster3768 Год назад

    Excellent information. Would have been better with some video of the mirage or some type of animation showing the mirage at different wind speeds, etc.

  • @mikeschlabach1113
    @mikeschlabach1113 6 лет назад

    Wow. That was very informative and concise. Thank you.

  • @wjmilnerii
    @wjmilnerii 4 года назад

    Mind blown. Thank you, sir!

  • @jamessmith8617
    @jamessmith8617 4 года назад

    Great! Good to see you again on RUclips! Good intel for sure😎😎🤙🏻🤙🏻

  • @kcb3887
    @kcb3887 4 года назад

    Solid advice, as always.

  • @joseperalta7606
    @joseperalta7606 6 лет назад +1

    Ryan, I love your videos, it's been the greatest education in the sport of hunting and shooting for me. Thanks for taking the time to teach.

  • @ronniefish7174
    @ronniefish7174 6 лет назад

    Awesome dude. You’re a sick unit.

  • @JDJD-hg9hu
    @JDJD-hg9hu Год назад

    Good stuff

  • @abobader4283
    @abobader4283 6 лет назад

    As always, helpful tricks...

  • @MegaPoxie
    @MegaPoxie 4 года назад

    Well explained and a probably more accurate than trying to estimate from watching grass heads blowing around. So shooting into a strong headwind at long range makes little difference on POI?

  • @user-qc7ty9er1b
    @user-qc7ty9er1b 8 месяцев назад

    Recommendations on good enough, as budget friendly as possible spotting scope setup that would still be able to pick up the waves you're mentioning?

  • @bntaft5133
    @bntaft5133 5 лет назад

    thank you Ryan

  • @michaelbritain5546
    @michaelbritain5546 3 года назад

    Now that's gonna come in handy, thank you.

  • @robwhite3874
    @robwhite3874 6 лет назад

    Great video thanks for all the info!!!

  • @shafeckbrown496
    @shafeckbrown496 6 лет назад

    Wow, more tips like this please

  • @lees0725
    @lees0725 4 года назад

    Awesome thanks for the great video

  • @TridentCapital
    @TridentCapital 4 года назад

    Great info.

  • @mosin9105
    @mosin9105 4 года назад

    Great info!

  • @vincef5832
    @vincef5832 5 лет назад

    What about the branches and leaves on vegetation? Or rolling leaves and dust movement near the ground? How about the feel on your face or wetting your finger tip for direction? Or throwing a sprig of grass in the air for direction(as golfers do)? If near water you can tell by ripples in the water or waves cresting. To learn natural wind readings check the wind report then analyze what the branches are doing,how the water moves, and what it feels like on your face. On average for .30 caliber small bores I figure with a 10 mile an hour full value wind as follows: 200yds-3", 300 yards-7", 400 yards-14", 500 yards- 22", 600 yards-33", 700 yards 47", 800 yards-64", 900 yards-84, 1000 yards-107"(more or less). It's crude but a decent start without gadgetry. Cut in half for 5MPH winds or a 45 degree(3/4) value. Magnums less.

    • @slappy1031
      @slappy1031 Год назад

      What about it? Throwing grass in the air was done by shooters way before fucking golfers

  • @paulwatterson5992
    @paulwatterson5992 6 лет назад

    Great video thanks!

  • @percisionshot4331
    @percisionshot4331 4 года назад

    Very informative

  • @TexasTrained
    @TexasTrained 4 года назад +2

    I got using the spotting scope for wind/mirage ..My question is when you were a Sniper without a Spotter, what ootic did you use then? Binoculars or you Rifle Scope?

    • @richardrisner3635
      @richardrisner3635 4 года назад +1

      trey orr any magnified optic will show you the mirage. We read it in our rifle scopes in field matches regularly

    • @TexasTrained
      @TexasTrained 4 года назад

      @@richardrisner3635 Thanks..I've seen the mirage with my rifles before.I was just asking him if the rifle was all he used or his Binoculars.
      But thank you for telling me.Im learning how to read it now with my scope.
      Do you have any Tips that might help me?

  • @wolverinekut
    @wolverinekut 5 лет назад

    As always excellent 👏👏👏👍

  • @pauldavis5578
    @pauldavis5578 5 лет назад

    brilliant...thanks

  • @nooceluap7760
    @nooceluap7760 8 месяцев назад

    Hi Ryan,
    Thanks for mentioning that you even see heat waves in the snow (I was hoping to avoid those pesky waves while taking super zoom photos). Now to risk sounding totally ignorant...You also stated that wind coming straight at you or going straight away from you is treated like no wind for shooting. Doesn't the wind slow down or speed up the bullet, which would result in more or less drop in elevation? I know its a lot less surface area of the bullet to be affected by the wind head on or directly away from you but I'm just assuming it would be an appreciable effect for a 1000 yard shot or longer.

  • @dr.ivanpenna6767
    @dr.ivanpenna6767 5 лет назад

    fantastic!

  • @shutthegate8232
    @shutthegate8232 6 лет назад

    Thanks mate.

  • @jeremeya1
    @jeremeya1 4 года назад +1

    What spotting scope was used in this video?

  • @HarjeetSingh-ev8vk
    @HarjeetSingh-ev8vk Год назад

    Ryan - is there a way to read wind in night? I do have a thermal and night vision clip on, but curious what tactics work during night shooting.

  • @billythompson8443
    @billythompson8443 6 лет назад

    great vid man. are you on any other channels

  • @searchingforaway8494
    @searchingforaway8494 9 месяцев назад

    Man.... there's a lot to it!!

  • @Wootangtw
    @Wootangtw 4 года назад

    Thanks buddy...

  • @glorybound7599
    @glorybound7599 Год назад

    Cool beans!

  • @whomagoose6897
    @whomagoose6897 6 лет назад +1

    On the windage turret there is an "R" with an arrow pointing counter-clockwise on my scope. Say if the wind is blowing towards your right do you index the windage turret towards the direction of the "R" as indicated on the scope? Seems like you would move the reticle left to move the barrel to the right.

    • @firebladeflow
      @firebladeflow 6 лет назад +1

      whats written on the scope tells you where the bullet will go if you turn in that direction: Turn to R - bullet goes R - same with elevation

    • @casey197930
      @casey197930 5 лет назад

      @chocoloco654 some people are beginning and or kids.

    • @Wyo2Wis
      @Wyo2Wis 4 года назад

      We were all beginners once.

  • @tedwrigt9945
    @tedwrigt9945 2 года назад

    Good info for sure BUT what if you don't have deep pockets for a 5k optic or you just don't want to lug around a ton of crap. I want to be able to do it the way Billy Dixon did it at the the battle at Adobe walls in 1874. The man made a kill shot at 1500+ yds with a Sharp's rifle with open sights.

  • @danielniffenegger7698
    @danielniffenegger7698 9 месяцев назад

    Any idea how an Air Force SOWT (special operations weather technician) would handle this considering weather is what they do and many are also trained in this?

  • @milancetkovic6433
    @milancetkovic6433 5 лет назад +3

    Great explenation,next time use camera that we can see in practice...

    • @slappy1031
      @slappy1031 Год назад

      Easier said than done, what do you want for free? Jesus....

  • @wilfdarr
    @wilfdarr 4 года назад

    @Ryan Cleckner So you mentioned in a different video that you can see the mirage with your naked eye as well: do you look short of your target to focus your eyes or does it just come from doing this enough with the spotting scope that your brain knows what it's looking for, or both, or something other?

  • @frankjaegar1805
    @frankjaegar1805 4 года назад

    Unreal 👌

  • @charlesludwig9173
    @charlesludwig9173 2 года назад

    And next use the MOA wind constant formula to get wind counter.

  • @pokey1168
    @pokey1168 3 года назад

    I would love to know about where he was on this lesson. It looks like the Texas panhandle.

  • @brocktovar4523
    @brocktovar4523 6 лет назад

    Good shit

  • @ajgraf122
    @ajgraf122 6 лет назад

    I was wondering if you had any tips on load development.

  • @tinarosewolfe3226
    @tinarosewolfe3226 3 года назад

    Sorry I know I'm full of curiosity but I'm also full of curiosity already answered by someone who I learned from it's a hand off in a relay of knowledge

    • @slappy1031
      @slappy1031 Год назад

      No, your posts are barely intelligible

  • @thesickening0169
    @thesickening0169 4 года назад

    You just shot me in the head from 1,000 yards out with an information bullet! Mind BLOWN.

  • @gsnicholas8522
    @gsnicholas8522 Год назад

    You mentioned several times about a quality optic (which I agree with completely), but you never mentioned what optic you were using. I can see the brand, but not the model. That would be good information to have since that brand has several models at different quality levels. Otherwise, great information.

  • @davidbanther7716
    @davidbanther7716 Год назад

    Wow

  • @bdeshi9323
    @bdeshi9323 2 года назад

    Ryan SFSC stopped teaching wind this way along time ago. Ie. wind at your location is the most important as its the only known as well as the initial change of bullet direction that will have the longest impact. Not to say the 2/3s and 3/3s wind is not important its also super important but the 1/3s wind is given a little more importance.

  • @michaelcribbin7704
    @michaelcribbin7704 4 года назад

    Ryan I want your opinion on the 300 PRC thinking of buying one right now I have it Remington 700 R5 24" in 308 with a Leopold mark 4 scope on it what's your opinion on this rifle

  • @rebjimj.e.4119
    @rebjimj.e.4119 4 года назад

    Genius.

  • @bigstubert416
    @bigstubert416 5 лет назад

    That was good

  • @matthewjoanis1812
    @matthewjoanis1812 5 лет назад

    Looking at spotting scopes good out to 1000 yards. Currently favoring the Vortex razor. Any opinions?

  • @raining1975
    @raining1975 6 лет назад

    The wind at the shooter has the greatest effect on the bullet. If you were shooting 1000 yards and had a 500 yard wall that you could place at any point along that 1000 yards then the best place would be from 0 to 500, assuming the wind is constant from 0 to 1000.

    • @raining1975
      @raining1975 6 лет назад

      This is going to be a tough pill for you to swallow but you should check out mdttac.com/blogs/blog/the-four-actually-five-questions-every-long-range-rifle-instructor-gets-asked-eventually and scroll down to the first set of pictures. Does the bullet get pushed more from 900 to 1000 than it does from 0 to 100, yes BUT you forgot the part where the bullet still needs to go from 100 to 1000. Even with the wind being blocked off it still continues to move laterally for the rest of its trip towards the target, unless you think the bullet magically straightens itself out when the wind cuts off.