Airguns Beating Rimfires

I have a 2000 vintage champion 2000 CO2 rifle with aperture sights. the .177 pellets (7.6 g) come out at about 380 FPS.
PRACTICING offhand with this improved my NRA shooting by about 50 points out of 800 !
GOOD Practice. Cheap practice as I don't have to drive anywhere and the pellets and CO2 cartridges are a lot cheaper then a 223 or 308 round.
Bullet "trap" is a cardboard box with

Rectorseal 81881 5-Pound Duct Seal Compound,grey put in the backside INSIDE of the box. I cut a window in the front of the box and use painters masking tape to fix the target in front of this.​

Air rifle is the hardest one to shoot well due to extremely long barrel time , that is why you learn on air , move on to Rimfire and then to centerfire , and as you become older you get uncompetitive at air first, rimfire second , while you can run centerfire as long as eyes allow
 
Air rifle is the hardest one to shoot well due to extremely long barrel time , that is why you learn on air , move on to Rimfire and then to centerfire , and as you become older you get uncompetitive at air first, rimfire second , while you can run centerfire as long as eyes allow
I started with my M1A, then I moved to the dark side (AR 15) and increased my score just because it was easier to shoot and less recoil breaking up my position. I picked up the air rifle to improve aftter a half a year of doing 300 meter international match and NRA highpower OTC, Long Range, and Palma with a bolt rifle in 308
 
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When I won the centerfire AZPRC long range steel series the 2nd year in a row one of the competitors I didn't know all that well came up to me and asked what my secret was, so I told him - that I had been shooting Field Target air rifle competitions for years. He looked at me in unbelief thinking I was kidding with him and said so. I said back, I'm serious, that's much of the reason why I did well. He still almost didn't believe me, you know how people give you that funny look, like c'mon man quit messing with me, lol!

FT comps and pcp airguns;
I learned about how to shoot in the wind.
I learned about building a steady position.
I learned about form and follow through.
And this was all without noise or recoil which can be somewhat of a distraction so you really learn what, when, and how, your faults are causing the misses and what needs working on.

Past that it's just getting your dope down, managing recoil, and practicing long range with your precision rifle. There's differences but much of shooting airguns, or 22rf's, translates right over directly to shooting centerfire.
 
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Air rifle is the hardest one to shoot well due to extremely long barrel time , that is why you learn on air , move on to Rimfire and then to centerfire , and as you become older you get uncompetitive at air first, rimfire second , while you can run centerfire as long as eyes allow
My old eyes, meaning not seeing exactly where I was missing, was a main reason I quit shooting precision rifle comps, that and my physicality. I aged out as far as winning goes.

Fortunately I can still see good enough to score high or sometimes win my division with airgun in UFT or FT. That would suck to age out in those sports!
 
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I started doing the NRA highpower stuff when I had already "aged out". I did it to IMPROVE my own shooting and didn't care if someone else was going to win. I figured out a long time ago that there is "always somebody better then you" whether it is racing, weight lifting, shooting etc.
I got my "ego stroked" years ago, when I was working as range helper right before deer season opened. We were there to help people get zeroed in.
A guy with 2 teenagers came along and it was obvious his scope wasn't mounted properly. So, a quick lesson in boresighting and he got on paper and was happy. One of the teenagers had a .243 bolt gun, and his groups were like 8 inches at 25 yards (zeroing). They were shooting from a bench with sandbags etc.
I asked if I could shoot his rifle (scoped) and he said okay after looking for his dad's approval. I fired one round and it was right on. If I would have triangulated his group which I did in my mind, he would have been close to right on. I told him, take this little cloth bullet holder off of your stock and then your cheek weld will be more consistent because I believe it is moving on you and you are not getting the same sight alignment (scope paralax). He took it off and bingo, his groups were 1-2 inches at 100 yards.
The ego trip came when he said to his buddy "listen to that old guy, he knows his stuff" ha ha.
Fun times.
NOW, after having heart surgeries, valve replacement, ablation, pacemaker, cataract surgery and getting of a medicine that induced TREMBLES (heart palpitation) I am going to get on with my air rifle and see if I can get back into the 90's. I've been going down hill . Hopefully getting off this last pill and the trembles will help.