Dfanonymous "There are more important things to consider for field conditions in making a sub moa SINGLE shot, first round impact. Magnification does not help you with this. You only need to see the target. You shouldn't be looking at a specific part of the target be it living or not anyways"
I can't agree with you shouldn't be looking at a specific part of an animal. You just shoot & hope it hit's a vital spot? You must track wounded animals alot or miss. Your heart beat affects the shot whether you see it or not. Maybe try closing your eyes before you shoot.
I am curious if you practice on moving targets as to the target means of operation. What setup and what ranges are possible?You can disagree, that's fine and we can debate, but don't get sassy with me you child.
No I aim where I need to, generally on a hold for wind with spin dialed. The reticle is where it needs to be. I am however, NOT looking for the moisture on a deers nose or the pimples some hajis kids face. To redefine, the target being clear does not mean that it looks like a spec at distance. It just means that it you should be able to see it completely, but it shouldn't take up the entire scope. This is common practice in the military. How else would you be able to make a lead on a moving target?
The problem with shaking in the scope is that people tend to over compensate for it. Chase it. You don't when you aren't looking for it. It's easier to relax. If it's causing you to flat out miss then you have other things going on, bad support, to much stock pressure, to much muscling the gun, high blood pressure, high caffeine intake, etc. usually the common issue in the healthy is pressure. what artery do you think is close enough to your cheek that's transferring the pulse to the rifle? Hint: it's not your heart. Don't push it in so hard.
When there too much air in the lungs the heartbeat will bounce off the lungs, so you have to break at the bottom of the cycle.
Breathing control and firing on the respiratory pause IS away to control heart beat, so is chilling out and relaxing. You will miss more from mirage then you will from a heart beat if all this is in check.
if you are going for 1000y bench, then sure, I don't care what those dudes do, I don't get spotting shots in anything I do. For field use, there's more negatives with maxing out magnification then just letting it have some level of proportionality.
This (or at least blinding them through the scope) is actually something that I do with students to make sure their NPA is correct and they execute the shot process properly. Do it and dry fire till they are still on target after follow through, then load a round in the chamber. If you can get on target and execute the shot "blind" then you are probably doing things right. You can even execute the shot blind, and after the trigger is tripped, regain your vision and watch your own impacts.[/QUOTE][QUOTE="flylo, post: 1778630, member: 75385] Maybe try closing your eyes before you shoot.
Just speaking from a schoolhouse perspective, we shoot movers to 800 (day) / 600 (night) on an E-type silhouette target cut down to 12" wide. Target means of operation is a fella walking the pits holding up the target on a tall 2"x2" stick.I am curious if you practice on moving targets as to the target means of operation. What setup and what ranges are possible?
Thanks! I see that could work well. I usually shoot alone but I need to visit a range with a mover.Just speaking from a schoolhouse perspective, we shoot movers to 800 (day) / 600 (night) on an E-type silhouette target cut down to 12" wide. Target means of operation is a fella walking the pits holding up the target on a tall 2"x2" stick.