mdoerner
05-16-2010, 05:53
Hi All,
I have pictures but I won't waste the bandwidth (unless you wanna see 'em.) I was shooting my M1 Garand w/ Boyd's fat stock and club issued HXP ball today.
1st stage 71-0x, but I was able to call the last shot as a flyer. Why my freakin' left arm decided to "Go EAST young man!" on me is a bit disappointing, but oh well.
2nd stage: 86-1x Woo-Hoo, someone forgot to put X-ring repellent on my target! :D This is workable.
3rd stage: 87-1x This is getting better, I just may break into the low 400's
4th stage: 102-0x (Grrrr!)
Starts off with EVERYONE complaining about how they cannot see thru the mirage (very wet field and lots of sunshine). The major fault I had during this stage was I broke position on every shot to check thru my scope (even though I couldn't see a freakin' thing). I didn't position my scope and ammo close enough together. However, I thought I re-gained position correctly, so it should not have mattered that I broke position.
1st shots are in the back, and then climb vertically. Only 7 shots in the black, 1 in the 10 ring, 3 in the 9-ring, then 3 in the 7-ring, 4 in the 6 ring, 4 in the 5 ring, 2 on the paper, but outside the 5-ring, then 3 on the cardboard.
Question #1: When I break position, and resume my stance, is it the butt of the gun going progressively lower on my shoulder that is causing this? I've seen this on several if not most of my 4th stage targets (over the past year) that I've reviewed today. The holes get higher and are vertically strung for the 4th stage on nearly all the targets I've looked over.
Question #2: If the mirage is so bad that you can't see thru it, do you break position to raise your scope up so you can see over it? I'm not sure that is legal or not, but once I raised my scope off the ground, I could clearly see my "failure". I just couldn't do anything about it at that point.
BTW, I did check my position after recoil. I was shooting at target #2, and after recoil my rifle was either pointed at the number 3 on the right, or the center of the bullseye on target #3. My left elbow was NOT underneath the gun anymore like it was prior to recoil. When I relaxed prior to shooting, I was definitely looking at the bull of #2 w/o muscling the gun. The shots went up vertically, not diagonally (I was about 1 click to the left of the X-ring).
While "shooting blind" really messed up some scores (like mine and some others) there were a few who were unaffected. I'm DYIN' to be one of THOSE guys who can hold their position regardless. They were all AR mousegun shooters. Of the three shooting M1's with HXP ball, I got a 346-2x today, the winning score was a 389-?x. The 3rd guy shooting his M1 had even more problems and couldn't get thru the 240's. Once this position thing is licked I think everything else will fall into place. Shooting blind also has the benefit on unmasking faults/flaws in my technique that I hope you guys can point the way to greater success.
In any case, thanks for all your help so far. If you need the pictures of my targets to "Read the Tea Leaves" so to speak, I can post 'em.
Mike Doerner
I have pictures but I won't waste the bandwidth (unless you wanna see 'em.) I was shooting my M1 Garand w/ Boyd's fat stock and club issued HXP ball today.
1st stage 71-0x, but I was able to call the last shot as a flyer. Why my freakin' left arm decided to "Go EAST young man!" on me is a bit disappointing, but oh well.
2nd stage: 86-1x Woo-Hoo, someone forgot to put X-ring repellent on my target! :D This is workable.
3rd stage: 87-1x This is getting better, I just may break into the low 400's
4th stage: 102-0x (Grrrr!)
Starts off with EVERYONE complaining about how they cannot see thru the mirage (very wet field and lots of sunshine). The major fault I had during this stage was I broke position on every shot to check thru my scope (even though I couldn't see a freakin' thing). I didn't position my scope and ammo close enough together. However, I thought I re-gained position correctly, so it should not have mattered that I broke position.
1st shots are in the back, and then climb vertically. Only 7 shots in the black, 1 in the 10 ring, 3 in the 9-ring, then 3 in the 7-ring, 4 in the 6 ring, 4 in the 5 ring, 2 on the paper, but outside the 5-ring, then 3 on the cardboard.
Question #1: When I break position, and resume my stance, is it the butt of the gun going progressively lower on my shoulder that is causing this? I've seen this on several if not most of my 4th stage targets (over the past year) that I've reviewed today. The holes get higher and are vertically strung for the 4th stage on nearly all the targets I've looked over.
Question #2: If the mirage is so bad that you can't see thru it, do you break position to raise your scope up so you can see over it? I'm not sure that is legal or not, but once I raised my scope off the ground, I could clearly see my "failure". I just couldn't do anything about it at that point.
BTW, I did check my position after recoil. I was shooting at target #2, and after recoil my rifle was either pointed at the number 3 on the right, or the center of the bullseye on target #3. My left elbow was NOT underneath the gun anymore like it was prior to recoil. When I relaxed prior to shooting, I was definitely looking at the bull of #2 w/o muscling the gun. The shots went up vertically, not diagonally (I was about 1 click to the left of the X-ring).
While "shooting blind" really messed up some scores (like mine and some others) there were a few who were unaffected. I'm DYIN' to be one of THOSE guys who can hold their position regardless. They were all AR mousegun shooters. Of the three shooting M1's with HXP ball, I got a 346-2x today, the winning score was a 389-?x. The 3rd guy shooting his M1 had even more problems and couldn't get thru the 240's. Once this position thing is licked I think everything else will fall into place. Shooting blind also has the benefit on unmasking faults/flaws in my technique that I hope you guys can point the way to greater success.
In any case, thanks for all your help so far. If you need the pictures of my targets to "Read the Tea Leaves" so to speak, I can post 'em.
Mike Doerner