

The inability to wear contact shooting, because I have astigmatism and the contacts need to be plum to work properlyĪll of this combined to get me thinking, surely this can be the right way?.A weird sensation that the reticle was on the piss.A sore neck (sorer than normal at least).This would also mean my head (and eyes) were on an angle, which would result in – Because the rifle was sitting out towards the shoulder, I would need to cock my neck over to get a cheek weld. What I was also getting, is that it was uncomfortable behind a rifle. This is another issue, potentially related to my hip flexors (apparently) as well as potential Eosinophilic Oesophagitis, but I digress. I have overdeveloped neck muscles and hyperextend my neck. This is because, like me, if you keep finding yourself being off level, and needed to correct – it’s time to also look at your position and shooting and see if there is something you can change to fix it. I was pushing the rifle over with each shot, then eventually realising, correcting it, and causing a constant horizontal stringing off to the left (I shoot left handed, so my cheek pushes the rifle left).įrank recommends using the bubble level as a training tool and a diagnostic tool. I would look at it, level gun, take a shot, take another shot, take another, look at the bubble again, level the rifle back up, then take another shot, and repeat. In one of his excellent Everyday Sniper Podcasts, Frank Galli talked about peoples reliance on bubble levels, and, more importantly, he articulated the exact issue I had found with mine. I would correct, but, sure enough, my eye and brain would conspire to unlevel the rifle again with constant regularly. He happened to have one on him, I installed it, went out for a shoot, and was a little shocked to realise that if I had the rifle truly level, then the reticle (to my brain) was looking like it was nearly 5% 2 off.

At the time, I had never used one, though, had been considering grabbing one to check out 1. In discussions with one of the instructors, we talked about the bubble level. I started questioning the positioning at a course I did. Its the common turn of phrase – though, press and many people get a little hazy of exactly where that means. This is where I started shouldering a rifle, shooting of bipods, and likely, its because I read it on the internet. The pocket of the shoulder is that fleshy part, out towards the end of the collarbone, off the side of the pec. Philip’s lovely artworks gives us a good reference point here – Like many of us, likely, I shouldered a buttstock into the ‘shoulder pocket’ when shooting.

For more reading on that, I highly recommend Nathan Foster’s writings – especially in regards to shooting a lightweight magnum. If you are shooting on an angle, this won’t really work. Especially as people add new ideas and new knowledge to the pool.Īlso, this is within the context of the precision rifle, shooting squared up behind the rifle.

Change your position, you likely end up loading the bipod slightly differently, change position, your scope might need to be shifted to correct the new eyebox… it’s all a bit of an ongoing flow. Remember, all of this interacts and intertwines with each other. This is after I necro’d an earlier post of his regarding bipod loading. Philip Veloayo‘s recent post on his Facebook page got me thinking about this, yet again. I will be referencing much wiser and more competent men than me, and I would suggest you go view more of their stuff, and experiment yourself to figure out what works best for you. This article is not meant to be instructive – more – it’s a mishmash of some thoughts and ideas that have been circling around in my head for a bit now, and I wouldn’t claim to have the answers.
