If you are on Google + you can comment with a minimum of difficulty, and we get to see your avatar. If you are not a Googlonian, or do not wish to reveal your mane, I *have heard* that you can sign in as a guest.
One advantage of a blog is that the blogger gets to engage the audience. So comments are important to me. Comment away! Please.
I am working to see if there is a way to facilitate comments, but Google+ is a work in progress. Tomorrow may bring a solution we do not have now.
Ron
Monday, December 30, 2013
Thursday, December 5, 2013
Rapid Fire Silhouette
I have never had
anyone say “marksperson” to me, but I know it is just a matter of
time. ;)
Rapid
Fire Silhouette
Rapid fire silhouette, some folks would
call it *rabbit fire* which may be
more to the point, you don't study a target, you just shoot it. Or so
I thought.
At Extreme
Benchrest in Arizona, we shot a rapid fire silhouette match. It had
another name, but it was too steeped in the gunfight at the OK
Corral. Besides, didn't the Clantons and McLowerys get to shoot back?
Also if you’ve shot metallic silhouettes, it was nothing like the
game you know. Set that all aside, because only the targets are the
same.
We shot at 1/5
scale metallic silhouettes. They were placed according to species:
chickens at 30 yards, pigs at 40 yards, turkeys at 50 and rams at 60.
There were four at each distance for a total of 16 shots, You could
shoot from a bench or you could sit or stand any way you wished, but
the bench was the best choice because you started with an unloaded
gun,unloaded magazines and an open pellet tin.
What a great idea.
Unloaded magazines levels the playing field between magazine loaders
and single shots in one fell swoop. It also changes the match
strategy with magazine shooters having to concentrate on loading
while hearing the sounds of shots and hits. Lots of them.
In the 2013 match,
single loaders had the advantage with top scores (the shortest time
knock over 16 targets) all loading pellets singly. Shean Kaller won
the Pro division with a time of one minuet
five seconds. You
can see his first place run, as well as his 57 seconds practice run
on You
Tube at the Airgun Gear Show channel.
Tube at the Airgun Gear Show channel.
The
Rapid fire silhouette shoot is not only timing the time you take to
shoot, but is also timing the time you take to load.
Getting ready for this match I worked
out aim points for 25, 30, 40, 50 and 60 yards. I also shot the
course of fire twice. Hitting the steel animals at those ranges with
my S400 was easy. I worked on speeding us my trigger squeeze. This
was not enough. At he match, while I fumbled pellets, knocked over my
pellet tin and hunted for targets through my scope set at 32X, other
shooters smoothly and quickly loaded their guns to mow down targets.
They called time and I had three rams left to go.
Now, older and wiser, I will work on
how fast I can load my air rifle as much as how fast I can shoot it.
Ron
Sunday, November 17, 2013
Talking with Nick Jenkinson
Ron Gill, Nick Jenkinson & Collin Urquhrt at Extreme Benchrest
Collin is an engineer for Air Arms
At the Extreme Benchrest match in Arizona this November, I talked about our respective airgun clubs with Nick Jenkinson, three times World Field Target Champion. Nick is the president of his local field target club in Devon, England. Nick said that he is often asked by prospective shooters, “What kind of air rifle should I buy to be a top shooter"? He went on to explain that they needed to shoot any good rifle for a year or two, “to get the experience to become a top shooter.”
You can buy your way to the
top, but the cost is pellets and practice, not gear.
Ron
Nick Jenkinson still paying
his dues in a life time sport
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