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Ukrainian sniper who claims new world record. He’s 58 years old. (WSJ article)

Not a vintage sniper rifle topic, but an interesting article on the 58-year old Ukrainian sniper who likely set a new wartime record. Domestic Ukrainian rifle with a US Bartlein barrel and a Japanese March-FX scope, looks like a 4-40x52 Genesis version. Ammunition was custom made in Ukraine. Article outlines use of ballistic software, incredible skill and clearly some incredible luck.

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The Wall Street Journal, December 4, 2023

KYIV—The Ukrainian sniper had lain still for hours in near freezing temperatures when the command came to take the shot at a Russian soldier almost 2½ miles away. “You can,” his spotter said, and Vyacheslav Kovalskiy pulled his trigger.

The bullet took around nine seconds to reach its target, who doubled up and fell, according to a video of the shot reviewed by The Wall Street Journal. Kovalskiy and Ukraine say the shot set a new sniping distance record, breaking the previously acknowledged mark by more than 850 feet.

While combat hits such as this aren’t verified by a third-party adjudicator, the shot has offered Ukraine a morale boost when the country’s forces are struggling to make headway at the front line. A Ukrainian sniper, using a Ukrainian-made weapon and bullet, had broken the record. Sniping has played a prominent role in the war with Russia, where static front lines in a flat landscape suit the discipline, even as drones and mines change the way the marksmen operate.

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Custom-made rounds used by Ukrainian snipers.

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For conventional sniping, there are a lot of variables that are hard to quantify.

The macabre record was also a shot heard around the world of snipers, a group of highly skilled shooters who have long pushed the boundaries of just how far a bullet can travel with accuracy. Some are skeptical that Kovalskiy’s shot was a record.

To hit targets at ever-longer distances, snipers lean heavily on math, calculating a host of technical factors, from the air’s humidity to wind speed, temperature and the curvature of the earth. They also need a good rifle and a lot of luck.

On Nov. 18, Kovalskiy was already packing his rifle by the time the bullet reached its destination and a member of his team shouted that it was a hit. The shot was filmed and on reviewing the footage later, Kovalskiy and other snipers concluded it had been deadly.

“I was thinking that Russians would now know that is what Ukrainians are capable of,” Kovalskiy said, who hasn’t previously been named or spoken to the media.

“Let them sit at home and be afraid,” he added.

Several snipers and ballistics experts contacted by the Journal said that while the shot is possible with the equipment described, it would be hard to execute given the uncontrollable variables, not least the weather, that would have to be taken into account at such distances.

“For conventional sniping, there are so many variables that are hard to quantify, so the reality is anything over about 1,300 meters (about 4,265 feet) can be more luck than skill,” said Steve Walsh, a former U.S. Marines sniper instructor.

Kovalskiy’s shot hit around 12,470 feet, around a third longer than the Golden Gate Bridge. That distance would break a record of 11,600 feet set in 2017 by a member of the Canadian Special Forces in Iraq.

The 58-year-old former businessman’s journey to martial mythology started just before day break on Nov. 18, when he and his spotter, a partner who calculates distance, wind speed and other variables, set up positions across the river from a Russian military base in the Kherson region of east Ukraine.

The two men, who are part of a military counterintelligence division of the Security Service of Ukraine, or SBU, observed groups of Russian soldiers cutting wood. They considered these men’s ranks too low to shoot. At around noon, a group of five soldiers appeared and Kovalskiy noticed one instructing. He had his officer.

The spotter set to work. He used a laser to measure the distance to the soldiers. Using specialist software and meteorological data he concluded that there was a strong wind that would move the bullet around 200 feet from its trajectory. He calculated humidity and temperature, which affects how fast the bullet travels.

Even the spin and curvature of the earth has to be factored in for long-distance shots. By the time the bullet gets to its set distance, the target has already shifted with the earth’s rotation.


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Ukrainian sniper Vyacheslav Kovalskiy packs up a custom made sniper rifle.

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The scope on a Ukrainian sniper’s custom-made rifle.

Using all these variables, Kovalskiy tested a shot around 1,000 feet to the side of the target. It was a miss, the spotter told him.

They had got the wind speed wrong.
He quickly reset, reloaded and aimed.

“You have to (shoot) immediately because the wind changes constantly,” Kovalskiy said.


In video of the shot, the Russian officer can be seen gesticulating to men who had gathered around him. The spotter gave his usual command that he should fire.

“You can,” he said.

Kovalskiy pulled his trigger. The video shows a gap from shot to impact of around nine seconds, a period long enough that a target can have moved. U.S. ballistics expert Brad Millard timed the shot in footage and said that it was the correct time that this sort of bullet would take to hit 12,470 feet.

A sniper will aim their barrel above a target because gravity forces the bullet down. Kovalskiy’s shot was like a mini artillery shell, traveling over 330 feet above the level of the target before descending toward the unaware officer.

In the footage, the officer doubles up and falls and his men flee. The video ends.


The shot has been widely covered by Ukrainian news websites. It was also noted with pride by Ukrainian soldiers on the front line. In the Kreminna Forest in east Ukraine, a former sniper turned artilleryman said hearing the news was a “punch the air” moment.

“Everyone was talking about it,” he said.

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Vyacheslav Kovalskiy holds a typical sniper round and a larger handmade custom round that he and his spotter used to shoot at a Russian soldier.

Ukraine needs a boost. A much-heralded counteroffensive has been stymied by stubborn Russian defense. The country has lost tens of thousands of soldiers and Russia continues to bomb civilian sites.
Countries in war often turn to combat legends to build morale, and countries in the former Soviet Union have a history of elevating the sniper to hero status. At the start of this war, Ukrainians traded stories of the “Ghost of Kyiv,” a Ukrainian jet-fighter pilot credited with shooting down several Russian planes. The Ukrainian military later said that rather than an individual pilot, the “Ghost of Kyiv” was meant as a composite symbolizing the combined heroism of its pilots.

Millard, the U.S. expert who designs software to test gun ballistics, says he doubts how the Ukrainian sniper team knows for sure that the officer was killed.

The shot hit its target in the chest or stomach area, Kovalskiy said. Having seen footage many times, he is certain that the soldier died because of the way he doubled up and dropped immediately. The bullet they used was also so large, and would have traveled at such a speed, that it would be impossible to survive such a hit, he said.

“There is no chance he survived,” Kovalskiy said.

The lack of confirmation that the shot was fatal is likely to lead to continued skepticism. When British sniper Craig Harrison broke the then-record in Afghanistan in 2009, killing two, the British military confirmed sightings of the corpses.
Kovalskiy says that online critics are incorrectly basing many of their calculations on the type of bullet used by the record-setting Canadian sniper.

A round is made of the actual projectile that hits a target and the casing that contains the explosive material that takes it there. Kovalskiy’s round was custom-made by a local gunsmith. It has a similar projectile to the Canadian round but a larger case that could pack more propellant, making it faster.

At a location in Kyiv, Kovalskiy and his spotter laid out their gun and bullets for inspection.

The long, thin gun is a specialist sniper rifle called the Lord of the Horizon, of which Kovalskiy’s is one of around 10. The rounds are 16 cm long.

The barrel was made by the U.S. company Bartlein Barrels and the scope comes from Japan. But the rest is Ukrainian, adding to local pride.

Kovalskiy and his spotter wonder why there is so much skepticism about a shot of this distance when targets, albeit stationary, have been achieved at these lengths several times in competitions such as the King of Two Miles in the U.S.

The two men are no ordinary snipers. Kovalskiy has been winning long-distance shooting competitions in Europe and North America for decades and first met his spotter at such competitions in Ukraine.

But this time, Kovalskiy hit a man, not an inanimate target. Unlike most soldiers, who may never see an enemy’s face let alone know if they have killed them, snipers head out seeking to kill people whom they can clearly see and generally have little doubt if they have taken a life.

Harrison, the former British sniper, said that the record is a heavy crown to wear.

Though he has since written a book about his experiences, the sniper says the actual record brought him misery for years. He was named by the British military without his permission, which led to threats against his life and that of his family, he said.

Harrison said sniping contributed to severe post-traumatic stress disorder that he has suffered after fighting in Kosovo, Iraq and Afghanistan.

“I will carry that last instant of their life in my mind forever. I know it will never leave me,” he wrote in his book.

Kovalskiy and his spotter say they have no regrets about killing Russians. Despite his age, the Ukrainian signed up as a sniper on the first day of Russia’s full-scale invasion.

“It doesn’t worry me a gram,” Kovalskiy said.

Ievgeniia Sivorka contributed to this article.

SOLD ***SOLD***. Barrett M107A1 CQB in 50 BMG (All Tactical Black) ***SOLD***

Selling my Like New with only 10 rounds Total shot down the pipe, Barrett M107A1 CQB 50 BMG in All Black. This is the cheapest that you will ever find one of these in Like New condition.
I took it out for one Range trip and shot only 10 rounds using the supplied 10 round magazine. I cleaned and lubed the entire Rifle right afterwards and it looks exactly the same as it did when I received it New from Barrett.
It comes with an Accu-Tac Bipod Rail so that you can install the Bipod of your choice. I have the Factory M60 Bipod that came with it and I also have the Factory 1760 Pelican Custom Fitted Case with 1 magazine and the Rear Mono-Pod. (Scope, Mount and Harris Bipod not included.)
Here is your chance to own an Awesome Suppressor Ready Military Grade 50 BMG.
Only $old Shipped and Insured to your FFL
I can arrange a Private FTF sale to Michigan Residents and knock off $250 dollars from the price.

Rocksett and torque

I can't find this specific answer so... I'm about to mount my first muzzle brake using rocksett. Does the addition of rocksett add or take away torque from my initial dry setup with just the shims?

Put another way, will the brake turn more or less to achieve the same torque value? I'm having a very frustrating time finding the correct shim combo and don't want to be back to square one upon adding rocksett.

SOLD TBAC stuff

Have a few TBAC items to sell, prices are shipped:

TBAC Bipod w/ QD Pic mount
Price: 320 SOLD

Untimed 1/2x28 223 SR brake LNIB (opened and put back in)
Price: 100 SOLD

Timed 1/2x28 SR brake (no peel washer)
Price: 90 SOLD

Timed 5/8x24 SR w/ peel washer
Price: 95 SOLD

Untimed 5/8x24 CB brake
Price: 100 SOLD


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Democrap Liz Cheney Spewing The Democraps Campaign Points

If Trump gets elected he'll never leave. We'll have a dictator. The republicants can't be trusted. We'd be better off with a democrap house.
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223 bolt gun feed fixes

Looking for guidance how to set up a .223 bolt gun to feed reliably. I've searched the forum and all the past posts just turn into a pissing match as to why one mag material is better than the other. Let's just skip that argument...

Factory Rem 700 223 in KRG Bravo. Issue I have is that the last 1-3 rounds do not reliably feed. What happens is as the cartridge tips up into the chamber the base gets pushed down into the mag and the bolt rides up on top. Sometimes it doesn't even start chambering and the bolt will just slip over the top of the case.
One thing I noticed is if I push all mags firmly up into the magwell they will all feed no issues. So I'm debating if the adjustable trigger guard from KRG is worthwhile or if it's a bandaid for a bigger issue.

Anyone have tips to make these feed more reliably? I have 1x Metal MDT, 2X Polymer MDT, and 2X Magpul mags. Trying to source an accurate mag locally to test before I buy anymore. So far I'm striking out though.

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SOLD Big Horn Zermatt SR3 DLC with TT Diamond...Price Drop

Very Lightly Used Big Horn SR3 with DLC Coating RH Short Action with Standard Bolt Face (I can switch the bolt head to which ever the buyer wants) with TT Diamond Straight Shoe Trigger ...... SOLD Shipped My FFL to Buyers FFL

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Pappy Boyington

This was something cool to see for a change....

SOLD Factory KAC PVS30 L3 White Unfilmed Clip-On PRICE DROP

Looking to move to a thermal clip on, so this is for sale. Less than 3 hours of use on it. BLEM FREE tube. Email from KAC confirmed it is an unfilmed white L3 tube with a FOM around 2300. There is zero POI/POA shift. I have put it on my SP10 and taken it to 1100 yards. This unit smokes the single battery green PVS30s, PVS27s, and white L3 CNVD-LR I have compared it against in terms of resolution and light transmission. And again, zero blems anywhere in the tube.

It has only been used on a 6.5CM, 5.56, and 22LR. It is 3 months into a 1 year warranty from KAC (they can be finicky about transferring, but I haven't had issues doing so with other units that had defects). I have all of the paperwork to show that this is a legit unit that was shipped directly to me from KAC. You won’t have to worry about a knock on your door from a .gov suit in the future.

The pics through the scope were taken from my phone last night at 50 yds while it snowed. First picture is at 4x (no IR), second picture is at 8x (no IR), third pic is at 8x (with IR).

Will trade or work a trade for a CLIP-IR ELR, UTM/UTX, etc. Or $8500 firm shipped to you. I would also trade for a green single battery PVS30 or PVS27 and $$ so that I can invest the cash towards a thermal.

Happy to answer any questions you may have. Other Hide members have looked through the unit in person and can also verify or attest to the quality.

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Manners / Tac Ops Possible Collaboration Build

Tom and I have been speaking about doing a collaboration build. The platform would be the Tac Ops X-Ray 51mf. That would be his T4A folder with a Badger Forward EFR mount with a Krieger Varmint contour barrel installed into a Surgeon 591 action & DBM. I’ll probably offer a 16 ¼ to 18 inch barrel threaded for a Tac Ops Titanium Can. He was thinking seriously about discontinuing the folder and I hope that he keeps it in his fine inventory of products.

We are still in talks about this collaboration and wanted to see who might be interested? We are talking about 25 to 50 platforms atm



Mike R.

SOLD Rimx/proof/Ep5

Barreled action, bix trigger, and arken EP5 up for grabs. About 500 rounds down it. Shoots the SK long range into tiny groups. Subs shoot not as well but that's to be as expected, however they are very fun with a suppressor. Group below was first 5 round group with SK long range. I'll probably regret selling this but to many irons in the fire. Included is roughly 900 rounds SK long range and 400 rounds cci quiet. (Suppressor not included)
Also comes with 2 mags
$2500 tyd.

May be willing to trade for ATACR or mark5 in mils.
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Maggie’s G.O.S.A.F.E. Act, Semi-Auto Firearm Ban in the Seante Now

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  • Poll
Rebarrel Choices

Which for 1500 ft/lbs at 800 yards. Affordable ammo or reloads.

  • 300 prc

    Votes: 13 46.4%
  • 300 win mag

    Votes: 2 7.1%
  • 338 win mag

    Votes: 1 3.6%
  • 338 lapua

    Votes: 1 3.6%
  • 7mm prc

    Votes: 10 35.7%
  • 28 nos

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Something else

    Votes: 1 3.6%

I’m rebarreling a 28nosler and leaning toward 300 prc. Check my logic.

I want the gun to do what a 28nosler does- carry 1500 ft/lbs out to 800 yards. I have basic stuff for reloading, and about 100 once-used 300 prc brass, but if I can find factory ammo that does what I want, I’ll just save myself time and use that.

The other options.

Vs 300 win mag. I first assumed I wanted 300 win mag because of the availability of ammo. But I’m not seeing any factory ammo that gets 1500 ft/lbs at 800. A few hard-to-find and expensive options get it out to 700, but most of the typical 180grain stuff peters out at 600. I could get a 1:9 twist barrel, deepen the throat and shoot heavy bullets to get me out to 800, but why not just get a PRC that does that out of the box?

Vs 28 nos - quickly becoming convinced 28nosler is being made obsolete by 7mm prc. Everything about it is expensive and hard to find.

Vs 7mm prc - I don’t see any advantage over 300prc, unless you want less recoil. I put brakes on all my stuff, so not an issue.

Vs 338 win mag - kind of seems to be becoming obsolete- stuff is expensive and not so easy to find. Might as well get a PRC with slightly better inherent ballistics.

Vs 338 lapua- same as 28 nos. At $7 a round, I won’t shoot enough to become proficient with the rifle. I’d have to reload to get the price down enough to shoot a few hundred rounds without going broke.

Kind of seems 300prc is the way to go. Kind of stinks that honrnady eld-x is the only widely accessible hunting ammo, so there’s a chance I’ll wind up reloading. But all the options above would probably require reloading anyway, either to get the ballistics I need or to get the price of ammo down to a tolerable level.

Made a poll for the fun of it.

Night Vision Thermals

Long time listener, first time caller.

I have spent the last two weeks following a similar jump into the world of thermal optics this past summer and all I manage to do is confuse myself. I’m posting because I’m just frustrated and tired of running in freaking circles…I live in a small town so it’s not like I can run down to (fill in the blank) and handle/try out anything; I’m entirely reliant on the internet/forums and I’m just getting nowhere.

I’m looking for two things. The first and one that’s confusing me is a thermal weapon sight. I’m north of 50, I’ve learned to buy the one I want first because it’s far more expensive to ladder my way up and I’ll end up with that one way or another anyway.

Best example is probably early in my hunting career, also optics. I bought three sets of binos up until I finally got what I really wanted…a nice pair of rangefinder binos. Would have been way less expensive to just save up and get what I wanted although it’s nice to have a couple of pretty good binos for the kids or friends who forget or don’t have them or whatever. Also I never wonder if I could see better with a little bit better glass.

This stuff is far too expensive to go jacking around with and I don’t want to buy three to get the fourth that I really want, so here I am. I cannot be the only one who finds this incredibly confusing.

Plan is to buy Pulsar XR50’s for scanning and a dedicated weapon sight for rifle(s).

I think I’ve learned enough to know that 640 is an important number, I don’t care whether I can record video at all, in fact I won’t use that feature at all. I just don’t want to have buyers remorse. I’ll shoot inside of 300 and may swap between a .300BO and 6.5 Grendel, both are AR’s but primary is .300BO. I’d like it to range whatever I’m looking at and would like to zero a couple of reticles to my rifles/loads.

Of course the first question back at me is probably, “What’s your budget?” The answer is I don’t know. Maybe below $8k? $5000? No idea. Brand? Don’t know, don’t care. I like and run Trijicon and EoTech among other brands on different rifles but I’m not married to any of them. My open tabs on my ipad right now are, “I Ray”, “Trijicon”, “Halo-LR” but because I’ve got over 100 tabs open that’s just the start. I’m not above buying used either.

Would one or more of you who knows this stuff be so kind as to throw two or three brands/models out there that you believe will fit the bill? Say run the spectrum of $3500-$8000.

I should have done this about July so I could shop and potentially grab one at some sort of a decent price. Now is most likely the time that demand is strongest so I suspect price is not moving around much.

Will probably buy this first and wait on the binos…it’s a lot of $ and I dang sure want to know I’m going to use this stuff enough to justify the spend.

Since I’ve got you…are the Pulsar binos I mentioned what I ought to be looking at? Are there others/as good/better at roughly the same price?

Thanks guys, and I’m sure thankful for forums such as this where others give so freely of their experience/knowledge. I’d chime in if I thought I’d be helpful but since this stuff is NOT my specialty I just keep my mouth shut and am thankful for those who give so freely of their experience/knowledge to complete strangers. If you want to know something about inshore gulf coast fishing or smoking ribs…happy to oblige with what I know. That’s all I’ll claim to be half good at.

Bill Maher

He's a talented funny fellow and though I disagree with much of his rhetoric. He pretty well nails it here.

-Christ was not born on 25 December. Its the celebration of the pagan solstice. As Im going to prove in a follow up thread, Christmas is nothing but a lie deception. Santa is a foul lie foisted on children. I remember a Xmas cartoon that stood out starkly...All good things come from Father Christmas Im not being a scrooge, but think we all need to see the truth. Honoring a lie is almost always catastrophic.

-Our country was not founded on 'Christian' values. The words were "Our constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. John Adams ". Many of the founders thought of themselves as deists'. Google it. To do what Johnson and many others want would be exactly contrary to separation of church and state.

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