by in2anity » 09 Jun 2023, 8:53 am
The truth is, your technique can be flawed, but as long as you are consistent with your (flawed) technique, you can more or less make it work. And this all comes down to practise. Practise, practise and more practise, repeating the same routine hundreds, if not thousands of times, until no concious thoughts go into say the 20 steps required to shoot a good shot. Ideally you want to be in a sort of trance or flow, where your conscious is just watching those flags for the right moment. Dry fire is a common way of filling in the void from a lack of range time...
My cheek weld is very tight, but that's because all my shooting is done off the elbows, with a tight stabilising sling pulling the rifle hard into my shoulder. These F class prone style shooters indeed take a "less is more" approach, where they aren't making a lot of contact with the rifle. They are basically just watching the flags for their condition, and then carefully actuating the trigger. But that demands having a boat anchor of a rifle - if your free recoil a light sporter, it will likely jump like a mofoer and probably sting your shoulder. That's how a flinch develops.
We all have our own technique, but my approach to shooting a sporter from the bipod is to drive the rifle pretty well - have it in the shoulder properly, and be concious of at the very least your breathing cycle, shooting after the exhale (actually that is automatic for me, because it's a core requirement of sling shooting). If you practise enough, you can even train to shoot between heartbeats. This is facilitated with a scope because you will clearly see your pulse, whereby the reticle will "jump". Again, this will take a lot of work and dedication, and probably a digital trainer like a SCATT.
At the end of the day, nothing will substitute time on the range. You can speed up the learning, but you can bypass it. Shoot weekly target for a year, and then your fundementals should be sharp. Build from there.
Last edited by
in2anity on 09 Jun 2023, 9:15 am, edited 1 time in total.
At what point does lack of maintenance become patina?