9 after rest in prone
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9 after rest in prone
A prone dilemma...
Let´s say you shoot a numer of "good" shots (say a tight 99 or 100p).
Then you rest, just putting down the buttplate from the shoulder. When you continue, you check the zero point etc, everything feels perfect and you feel good to go.
And you get a flyer (sub 9,5 or so) in the first shot. And after that, you are back in the 10 for the following 9 shots, without doing any changes to the position, without adjusting the rear sight or anything.
I have tried to understand why this happens. Has anyone experienced the same thing and found a solution to this problem?
I personally suspect it has to do with eiter the buttplate position or the head position on the chiek piece. I just can't understand why it only affects the first shot, and not the following?
Let´s say you shoot a numer of "good" shots (say a tight 99 or 100p).
Then you rest, just putting down the buttplate from the shoulder. When you continue, you check the zero point etc, everything feels perfect and you feel good to go.
And you get a flyer (sub 9,5 or so) in the first shot. And after that, you are back in the 10 for the following 9 shots, without doing any changes to the position, without adjusting the rear sight or anything.
I have tried to understand why this happens. Has anyone experienced the same thing and found a solution to this problem?
I personally suspect it has to do with eiter the buttplate position or the head position on the chiek piece. I just can't understand why it only affects the first shot, and not the following?
If it moves around it is more likely something you are doing. Cheek not in the same spot on the cheekpiece perhaps?
Most often a barrel that is thermally unstable the shots will always pull in the same direction. Now, if cooling is the problem shading is not going to help. The barrel will cool at a different rate depending on the outside air temperature and wind conditions. (cools faster on a breezy cool day than a still warm day) so it is very hard to predict when to start shading and by how much.
Some guns with thermal stress problems it is the bedding of the action to the stock that is not right other times it is the barrel itself. Bedding can be upgraded by glass or pillar bedding while barrels with thermal stress problems can be sometimes be fixed by cryogenic stress relief treatment. That is the lower cost option to getting a new barrel but if stress relief does not work barrel replacement is ususally the next option.
'Dude
PS, Before I got to spending too much money I would try to get the same general behavior from the rifle off the bench using a telescopic sight. If ti does it then, then you know it is not something in your position.
Most often a barrel that is thermally unstable the shots will always pull in the same direction. Now, if cooling is the problem shading is not going to help. The barrel will cool at a different rate depending on the outside air temperature and wind conditions. (cools faster on a breezy cool day than a still warm day) so it is very hard to predict when to start shading and by how much.
Some guns with thermal stress problems it is the bedding of the action to the stock that is not right other times it is the barrel itself. Bedding can be upgraded by glass or pillar bedding while barrels with thermal stress problems can be sometimes be fixed by cryogenic stress relief treatment. That is the lower cost option to getting a new barrel but if stress relief does not work barrel replacement is ususally the next option.
'Dude
PS, Before I got to spending too much money I would try to get the same general behavior from the rifle off the bench using a telescopic sight. If ti does it then, then you know it is not something in your position.
Found it
robf: I rest because my left hand starts to get numb (which also affects the mental game a little).
I was thinking in the same ways as you, RobStubbs and mangusta - perhaps it is more of a mental issue: when I continue the match - I'm not really "there" at the first shot.
So - last night at a local competition, in order to get back into the zone before I take that first shot, I dry fired and double checked my inner position. And that actually solved the problem, scoring only 10's after resting. (And I won with 592 :)
Thanks again guys!
I was thinking in the same ways as you, RobStubbs and mangusta - perhaps it is more of a mental issue: when I continue the match - I'm not really "there" at the first shot.
So - last night at a local competition, in order to get back into the zone before I take that first shot, I dry fired and double checked my inner position. And that actually solved the problem, scoring only 10's after resting. (And I won with 592 :)
Thanks again guys!
Re: Found it
Glad it helped, now, how can I get to shoot 592 in prone ? ;)BGC wrote:robf: I rest because my left hand starts to get numb (which also affects the mental game a little).
I was thinking in the same ways as you, RobStubbs and mangusta - perhaps it is more of a mental issue: when I continue the match - I'm not really "there" at the first shot.
So - last night at a local competition, in order to get back into the zone before I take that first shot, I dry fired and double checked my inner position. And that actually solved the problem, scoring only 10's after resting. (And I won with 592 :)
Thanks again guys!
Rob.