Caldwell’s Digital Wind Meter Helps Shooters Avoid Getting Blown Away

1
Caldwell’s Digital Wind Meter Helps Shooters Avoid Getting Blown Away

Caldwell CrossWind Wind MeterOf all the environmental factors facing a shooter one of the trickiest to master is the wind.

Stiff gusts wreak havoc with bullets at any distance, while a casual breeze is enough to blow the accuracy of a long-range shot. While there are all sort of tricks and tips shooters can use to tame blustery weather, one of the surest systems is the wind meter.

Caldwell aims to give shooters the ability to factor out the wind with its new CrossWind Professional. But the wind meter is more than just a digital version of sticking your finger in the air. The device has all the features someone serious about staying on target, no matter the conditions, is looking for in a wind meter.

The CrossWind offers a full range of measurement settings, giving shooters the option to gauge the wind in mph, km/h, m/s, f/s or knots. But it does more than give the prevailing currents, the meter actually pieces together a full profile of the wind conditions.

The wind meter records the maximum gusts and the average speed of the wind, in addition to current conditions. These extra variables are invaluable, giving shooters the edge in adjusting their scope and in anticipating the perfect moment to break their shot.
Caldwell CrossWind Wind Meter
This would be enough for most shooters, but Caldwell’s device also calculates a number of other environmental conditions that can affect a bullet's trajectory. With temperature, station pressure, barometric pressure, altitude and wind chill – among other data points – the CrossWind offer every bit of information pertinent to dialing in a shot.

The meter also features a rotating anemometer, making it easier to calculate the crosswind without having to factor in wind angle. It has a data hold function, allowing shooters to save data from one shot to the next. And the CrossWind also boasts a LCD backlight, making the meter useful no matter the lightning conditions.

Most retail sites have the CrossWind priced in the $80 to $100 range. This is quite a bit more than most entry-level wind meters, but puts the Caldwell product at the low end of comparable devices.

 


Long-Range-Shooting

Gun Digest Book of Long-Range Shooting

 

Previous article How to Pick Your First Concealed Carry Holster
Next article The Sporting AR: Ideal for Hunting?
Elwood Shelton is the Digital Editor for Gun Digest. He lives in Colorado and has provided coverage on a vast spectrum of topics for GD for more than a decade. Before that, he was an award-winning sports and outdoors reporter for a number of newspapers across the Rocky Mountains. His experience has consisted of covering the spread of chronic wasting disease into the Western Slope of Colorado to the state’s ranching for wildlife programs. His passion for shooting began at a young age, fostered on pheasant hunts with his father. Since then, he has become an accomplished handloader, long-range shooter and avid hunter—particularly mule deer and any low-down, dirty varmint that comes into his crosshairs. He is a regular contributor to Gun Digest Magazine and has contributed to various books on guns and shooting, most recently Lever-Actions: A Tribute to the All-American Rifle.

1 COMMENT

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.