The fact is most hunters SUCK and shooting.
Some of us suck at shooting AND hunting. It’s a lethal combo
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The fact is most hunters SUCK and shooting.
Depends on the shooterWhich has more pressure? Shooting at a target when the camera is rolling? Or taking a shot at a live animal with a tag that has taken 18-20 years worth of points to draw?
The old joke.You shot your friends? Twice?
No doubt. I didn’t watch the whole video, just some of the shooting. It looks like most if not all of the shots were prone and with that giant front bag. I imagine hit percentage drops further from other field shooting positions.A scaled back test, 20 jugs instead of 100. He does better, but as expected. Shooting ain't easy...
Looks like the takeaway here is... Marines can't shoot and Rednecks from the hills can. Science...A scaled back test, 20 jugs instead of 100. He does better, but as expected. Shooting ain't easy...
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I'd buy Mike a beer for being game.
I agree, very different. Would be very easy to have an escape hatch in the back of his mind of "I have 5 loose rounds in my bino harness" or "if this goes completely sideways I don't have to upload the video." Marine Mike didn't have any escape hatches. Once he started, the whole world was going to see what really happened, good bad or ugly.Those two videos are apples and oranges. The guide has no pressure, a shooting mat, and that front bag is a bit much. He shot all from a single position, shot them I think all in order from closest to furthest (or pretty close) instead of random. Pretty open range with no obstructions.
I give him credit for not editing the video. And, being humble.
I think this is a great training exercise. I hope to find time to do something similar. Not for a video or anything, just to test myself and improve my skills before the season.
I don't know if its as far away as an apple to an orange but more like a red apple to a green apple.Those two videos are apples and oranges. The guide has no pressure, a shooting mat, and that front bag is a bit much. He shot all from a single position, shot them I think all in order from closest to furthest (or pretty close) instead of random. Pretty open range with no obstructions.
I give him credit for not editing the video. And, being humble.
I think this is a great training exercise. I hope to find time to do something similar. Not for a video or anything, just to test myself and improve my skills before the season.
Some of us suck at shooting AND hunting. It’s a lethal combo
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What about grinding the crown with the open end of a cleaning rod??Are you suggesting that scraping off carbon with dental picks wasn’t the best use of my time?
300 win mag wont hit that until close to 1000 yds....probably didn't come into play here.Transonic flight distance issues.
Every marine a sniper-man… or how the saying goes…They do that a lot. There's an epidemic of former military 35-50 year old guys with high levels of confidence in their shooting ability that are at odds with reality. These days even if they were an actual sniper I still reserve judgement because you can get a mixed bag there too. Some of them (Phillip Velayo & Frank Galli) are amazing shooters/teachers and I'd love to take a class from them. But some of them are like that Nicholas Irving guy who has been doing the rounds on a lot of gun Youtube channels lately. He thinks a .50 cal can blow your arm off if it passes within a couple feet of you, doesn't know the difference between MOA/MIL, and seemingly isn't very good at shooting.
Shooting prone off a pack is probably my most common position. A very close second would be off a tripod.No doubt. I didn’t watch the whole video, just some of the shooting. It looks like most if not all of the shots were prone and with that giant front bag. I imagine hit percentage drops further from other field shooting positions.
Agreed he was no where near experienced enough to try that challenge, so many issues, form, follow through, rear support, rifle selection, ranging.Just watched a backfire video on YouTube where an ex marine made the claim he could hit 100/100 hunting scenario shots out to 600 yards. He showed up with a standard/ unbraked tikka t3x in 300 win mag. I am not here to bash the guy but the real world results that were found in this video reflect the reason for the teaching on this forum. I believe that the average modern day American hunter/ shooter is not as capable as they think they are and big magnums do not equal higher hit rates. I would encourage anyone to watch that backfire video on YouTube. A little teaser, the guy hit 17/54 targets from 100 to 600 yards for a hit percentage of 31.4%. This video unintentionally defends the argument that properly placed bullets matter more than cartridge size.
rifle selection
Every Marine a rifleman.Every marine a sniper-man… or how the saying goes…