The reticle always moves to the left. I’m a right handed shooter. From what I can tell I’m straight behind the rifle (no angle between body and rifle)
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I have a sneaking suspicion that there is some offset for the different positions. I do know they getting straight behind helps with recoil management 100%, but at fine tuning I think it’s been mentioned that it could be check pressure is some other little thing.Trigger cam footage from accomplished shooters changed my perception of what these guys actually see for reticle movement.
Phil Velayo has a handful of videos on youtube that have trigger cam footage.
I dont think that's why they teach being square in current precision rifle courses. The below video has what i have seen to be typical justification for the squareness.
Maybe my mind isn't wrapped around this correctly but it seems that moving your hips to the left if your recoil movement is left is more likely to be offsetting cheek pressure or other forces pushing the butt right? Interesting input, i had not heard of or tried that before.
Precisely. NPOA is what one fixes when they chase the reticle with their hips. If the rifle bounces left, move your belt buckle left... Often it is only a few inches needed.If you’re not putting negative input into the rifle or face or hand. It’s all npa. Most of the time your reticle moves where you don’t want it is because your npa is off and there is torque on the gun somewhere.
I wouldn’t plan on spotting shots from a 6.5 creed from anything but prone under 400. 400 is not terrible to see splash but to actually spot your shot it’s going to be very difficult with just about anything.
Competitors including myself do a lot of shooting at that range because the time of flight is so short. Makes spotting difficult and you really have to train your mind to watch while everything is still moving. Past 500 spotting becomes much easier.
Precisely.Are you checking your natural point of aim after getting set behind the rifle and before each shot? I see it often where people are muscling the gun because their NPA is off the target.
I don’t pay much attention to NRL, but the top video solved a few mysteries. I’ve been wondering where in the world my nephew has been getting the bad habit of taking his eyes off the target when setting up for hunting shots. These guys look down a lot while focusing on getting the rifle in position with little need to keep eyes on target. I assumed the nephew was just being hard headed by continuing to do it, but now I see he’s trying hard to duplicate what NRL guys like this are doing in competition, and he hasn’t connected the dots.Trigger cam footage from accomplished shooters changed my perception of what these guys actually see for reticle movement.
Phil Velayo has a handful of videos on youtube that have trigger cam footage.
I dont think that's why they teach being square in current precision rifle courses. The below video has what i have seen to be typical justification for the squareness.
Maybe my mind isn't wrapped around this correctly but it seems that moving your hips to the left if your recoil movement is left is more likely to be offsetting cheek pressure or other forces pushing the butt right? Interesting input, i had not heard of or tried that before.
I doubt that it is because of watching these videos, because the majority of shooters have this problem, and I have seen it in many who don't put any effort into learning...I don’t pay much attention to NRL, but the top video solved a few mysteries. I’ve been wondering where in the world my nephew has been getting the bad habit of taking his eyes off the target when setting up for hunting shots. These guys look down a lot while focusing on getting the rifle in position with little need to keep eyes on target. I assumed the nephew was just being hard headed by continuing to do it, but now I see he’s trying hard to duplicate what NRL guys like this are doing in competition, and he hasn’t connected the dots.
He could get the idea from any shooters that don’t have to keep an eye on the target, but kids watch videos more than they ever watch good shooters elsewhere. We teach him to keep an eye on the target - he has picked up this bad habit from trying to emulate what he thinks is cool. I did have a chuckle at the scope cam video where the shooter lost track of the coyote target, and it didn’t even have legs.I doubt that it is because of watching these videos, because the majority of shooters have this problem, and I have seen it in many who don't put any effort into learning...
@TimberHunter : How did you do?
I don’t pay much attention to NRL, but the top video solved a few mysteries. I’ve been wondering where in the world my nephew has been getting the bad habit of taking his eyes off the target when setting up for hunting shots. These guys look down a lot while focusing on getting the rifle in position with little need to keep eyes on target. I assumed the nephew was just being hard headed by continuing to do it, but now I see he’s trying hard to duplicate what NRL guys like this are doing in competition, and he hasn’t connected the dots.
I’m starting to wonder if no reticle movement on a hunting rifle is a fallacy.
Anytime they are setting the gun for the shot there’s a lot of looking down to get the rifle situated (11:50, etc) That makes perfect sense for competition. Even hunting with a spotter allows a lot less attention on the animal.What part of the video are you talking about?
Hard to look at the target the same time as something else when you've got to move, check dope, etc.
This is my two cents. From an old guy that shot comps for a number of years, so take it for what it is worth. Being aware of your shoulder angle and this works for all positions. Shooting prone and your rifle is recoiling to the right. By moving your left elbow back a little your gun will respond. If your recoiling to left do the opposite. The other thing that would help. Was relaxing my neck and shoulders so head and cheek weld would stay in the gun through recoil.