Quote:
Originally Posted by
ar15
| i gonna have a shooting contest with my brother hes older but he can shoot a lillttle better |
If you and he are shooting offhand (standing and unsupported), then I suggest you spend some time finding your natural point:
Work up a solid stance with your feet about shoulder width apart. Mount the rifle from your shoulder with your trigger arm elbow almost level with the rifle. Try to bring your support arm elbow as near to directly under the rifle as possible.
Now, with an empty rifle, aim at your target. if you feel your body sway forward and backward, then get your feet more inline with the target. If you feel your body sway side to side, then slightly angle your feet away from the target until the side to side swaying stops.
Now, close your eyes and aim the rifle (unloaded) at where you think the target is. Open your eyes. If you are off your target, then adjust your stance to bring it on target. Remember, adjust your stance - not your aim. Close your eyes. Open. Adjust. Repeat. Repeat. Repeat. When you can open your eyes from a steady and comfortable stance and have the target in your sights, then you have found your natural point.
Now for fire control, remember what my old ROTC sarge told us:
"BRASS"
Breath = take a normal breath
Relax = let out just over about half of the breath
Aim = aim the rifle at the target - it will never be perfectly steady - try to develop a predictable wiggle pattern - like a figure eight.
Sight = if open or peep, concentrate on front sight and center it in notch or aperture. if scope, center eye for full field of view with crosshair in the center of the field.
Squeeze = or press as the gent said above - whatever - but don't jerk the trigger as the sights cross the target or it will surely pull the shot - usually low and to one side. Learn to apply pressure and stop - holding the pressure - as the target approaches again and then apply more pressure and stop - holding the pressure as >>>>> BANG. Dead center hit. High five man! It will change from being a controlled surprise to a called release with hundreds of rounds of practice.
Practice smart. Its not how many shots you take. Its how few it takes you reach a new accuracy goal. With .22s and position shooting (offhand, sitting, kneeling, or prone), 40 rounds in a session is about all a new shooter can handle before fatigue sets in and makes more shooting counterproductive (you will start reinforcing bad habits instead of good at this point).