Shotgun - Bruised Cheek

bigeyedfish

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Sep 22, 2021
Messages
156
I never had this problem in the past when I shot somewhat often, but for the last couple years, I have been getting a bruise on my cheek anytime I shoot a round of sporting clays. My gun mount is certainly worse than it used to be, but it feels like I'm fighting a losing battle with gun fit. It has happened to me with a couple different guns, including a 20 gauge 1100 with target loads, so it definitely isn't a problem with the magnitude of the recoil. My CZ 1012 has done it to me several times now. When I first set it up, I chose the shim to match the stock measurements of an 870, which never gave me a problem in thousands of rounds. I swapped shims around last night to raise the comb a bit, but I probably won't get out to shoot for a while.

Have any of you guys run into this? I'm interested in any advice you may have.
 
I knew a guy who fit shotgun stocks to champion trap and skeet shooters, as well as some olympians. A big part of cheek bruising comes from the angle of the butt-pad compared to the bore axis. You want it to be exactly 90 degrees perpendicular. Most are undercut a bit, with the toe/bottom being closer to the muzzle than the heel. That angle, when the shotgun is trying to push straight back, actually causes the heel and cheekpiece to roll up the shoulder, like a kid launching his bike off a ramp. That causes the cheekpiece to move up toward your cheekbone more. The more the undercut, the more violent the action.

EDIT: the only other thing that readily comes to mind, is the initial mount - is the cheekpiece firmly against your cheek, and are you keeping it there during the firing sequence?
 
Many years ago I bought a Win. 101 to use for shooting trap. Had the same problem. Cure was easy-sold the damn thing!! No worthwhile advice for you unfortunately!.
 
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