Spotting your shot, most import factors.

There's other basic body mechanics that I've learned in other athletic pursuits that I find applicable to good shooting form. Activating my core, breathing from my belly/diaphragm rather than my throat/upper chest, making sure my legs/feet/butt are active, making sure I keep an active/open chest and not let my posture go limp or collapse on the gun after a few shots. All things you would do if I was going to say throw a 10lb medicine ball at you and have you catch it and throw it back with force.
 
For me, I can’t and won’t shoot braked. And I avoid shooting non suppressed. I leave the range if abusive brakes are around.
There's a dude with a braked 300 PRC who frequents our range. Brutal -- even from the other end of the line.
 
Are you an Olympic level biathlete or freestyle competitor? Are you a world class bullseye or service rifle competitor? If not- stop giving advice that you don’t understand.
Right. Lol

I don’t mention anything that folks can’t look into further themselves, and they shouldn’t take my word for it, or trust videos from some measly national champion smallbore silhouette shooter. If an idea has real value it isn’t a secret, or limited to only certain shooting disciplines.

You like people to believe only your ideas are valid and it helps some shooters to know other techniques exist. There’s a lot of value in how you teach people, and there’s value in other techniques as well.

You’ll be ok.
 
Right. Lol

I don’t mention anything that folks can’t look into further themselves, and they shouldn’t take my word for it, or trust videos from some measly national champion smallbore silhouette shooter.


I can guarantee you that shooter isn’t telling normal shooters and hunters to time their shots offhand anymore than a patch wearing F15 pilot is trying to tell a normal human how to dog fight in a float plane.
 
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