- Sep 11, 2018
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Hey guys , wouldnt it show the ability of the shooter and equipment to shoot 1 shot at 50 induvidual spots (1/2" or so) rather than 10 different 5 shot groups?
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That makes a hell of alot of sense.... ??Theoretically sure, I think the best drills you can do at 100 yards involve changing the pressures of the shooter rather than arbitrarily changing the target.
If you can, try doing a 5 shot group shooting from different positions and maintaining the consistency of the group.
100 yards isn't going to train any sort of intuition for drop or windage. So the best drills you can do are going to be putting more stress on yourself and not see any expansion in your groups.
Putting 1 round in 50 different targets won't make you any better of a shot in my opinion. It's just a waste of ammo and potential data.
I see what your saying, but i think shooters should practice with the tool they intend on using....if that makes sense100 yd. facility- 22lr.
Appropriate tool for the job.
Thats definately something to think about.....Again you have to ask what your goal is? Are you competing at PRS? Are you just going to local bench-rest competitions? What ranges are you trying to get good at shooting from? Or just become an all around general shooter? I think if you have access to just short range (Sub 500 yards) .22lr trainers can be a great way to actually have to work with data and make windage calls. For larger calibers 300 yards the effect of wind is still incredibly marginal. You can take a $150 savage and hit bullseye targets at 300 yards all day long. What specific skills do you need to improve?
Even if it's just getting used to the gun. Shooting 10,000 targets benchrest with your rifle won't suddenly make you a dead-shot in a PRS competition or a hunt. You have to identify what you're trying to get good at that first, then come up with drills second.
I never like prescribing exactly what to do, but the first guy that ever taught me PRS told me to just run the distance of my set target (necessary most of the time anyway) sprint there, sprint back, then do a prescribed course of fire.Sometimes stressors are good. Push-ups between shots. Remember to watch indicators wile getting back on the gun. Shoot only off the reticle, helps me stay up with my SFP madness.