Agree, gear makes it easier for sure, but provides diminishing returns. It will help hide errors or make up for less developed skills.When shooting vitals-sized targets, this statement describes 95% of people (myself included, with a full custom rifle)
Having said that, first establish good shooting. ModernDayRifleman videos are the best Ive seen and used
After perfecting, you may find gear upgrades are in order (or not). All gear has diminishing returns.
Having a spotter to help you understand misses is important. Nothing worse than wasting ammo and learning nothing
If that is happening to me, and it does even with the best gear, I go back to fundamentals. I usually find something I am missing in the way I am behind the rifle and controlling the immediate recoil impulse—not the complete spotting shots impulse. I watch myself miss all the time and cause the miss with poor recoil management.
If you don’t have the skills to actually execute the shot, no amount of gear will help at distance because the shooter exceeds the margin of error.
Having a spotter helps, yes, but misses off the left edge because of poor body position or trigger press will get called as a missed wind. I did that too…
It’s better to have someone watch your body position. Or, record yourself and watch it back. Upload the video to have people really give you feedback.
The bottom line, and hardest to swallow because of ego, is that the shooter is most often the reason we suck and fall apart past 500.
I know, because I can still fall apart at distance if I am not constantly practicing. I am at best a long range student. I know A LOT of the classroom stuff. But, it is my practice that really determines whether I hit targets at long range.
Here, misses were not likely due to ammo variability if the misses were as described.
And, while a new bipod can help hide/make control easier, he said he is steady on the shot, so it is happening after he presses the trigger.