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The target makes a difference!

Started by fast14riot, November 05, 2012, 08:28:03 PM

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fast14riot

During practice today I decided to put up a larger target.  It was a NRA 50yrd small bore target.  It has small round NRA logos in each corner that I use for sighters.  They are maybe 1/4" and I'm shooting a 1322 with iron sights at 6yrd one hand offhand.  I can hit the sighters reliably, but when I move to the target I'm all over the place!  This target has a large black middle with no white x ring.  I set my sights for a 6 o'clock hold on a 1" bull.  Without being able to discern the x-ring I opened my arc of movement up to about the 9 ring which is 2" diameter roughly.

So having a clearly visable bull/x-ring really makes a difference!  My father always told me to "aim small, miss small."  This really drives that home!






Aim small, miss small.

-Xander

jdub

#1
Quote from: fast14riot on November 05, 2012, 08:28:03 PM
During practice today I decided to put up a larger target.  It was a NRA 50yrd small bore target.  It has small round NRA logos in each corner that I use for sighters.  They are maybe 1/4" and I'm shooting a 1322 with iron sights at 6yrd one hand offhand.  I can hit the sighters reliably, but when I move to the target I'm all over the place!  This target has a large black middle with no white x ring.  I set my sights for a 6 o'clock hold on a 1" bull.  Without being able to discern the x-ring I opened my arc of movement up to about the 9 ring which is 2" diameter roughly.

So having a clearly visable bull/x-ring really makes a difference!  My father always told me to "aim small, miss small."  This really drives that home!

Aim small, miss small.

-Xander
For my IZH-46, which I use for paper target only, I have it sighted in for a 6 o'clock hold on a 10 meter pistol target.  That's the common way to do it if you're shooting paper at a fixed distance.  Rest the bull on top of the sights and your point of impact is actually about 1/2" higher in the center of the bull.  It works great but only if you only shoot one target size from one distance.

I did the same for my 2300S for a while but enjoy shooting too many different types of targets so I changed it to point of aim = point of impact.  As you've shown it really is hard to be accurate with a large bullseye.   I print out targets that have a black center bullseye the diameter of the pellet then a white ring around that.  It's easier to be accurate.

fast14riot

Yep, this gun I keep zero'd for 10m with a 6 o'clock on a 1" targ-dot since I do shoot rats and bottle caps, and starlings.  I don't normally use these targets for practice, but just thought I would see what I could do on them.  Any 10m shooter can tell I'm right handed by the two groupings of high right and low left.  The only reason I moved in to 6yds was because the sun was blinding my left eye and I don't like to use occluders.  Plus its always nice to switch it up every now and again.

I really need to get a printer so I can print my own targets for practice.


-Xander

1377x

aim small miss small are words to live by
all my firearm targets are 6" bulls.it helps.i can unload 30 rounds of .45acp into the 6" bull rapid fire 25-30ft my magazine is 30 rounds so i dont have to swap mags frequently
i have been having fun with my custom 2300 w/rd one hand two hand .its funny watching my nephew shoot it,he shoots it like he is using a scope one day i'll tell him he can hold it at arms length and shoot both eyes open
closed mouths dont get fed

breakfastchef

Quote from: fast14riot on November 05, 2012, 08:28:03 PM
I can hit the sighters reliably, but when I move to the target I'm all over the place!

I find this to be very true for me. I tend to be able to hit a smaller, better-defined target more reliably than a larger one. I also find that I can shoot a 10M Olympic target better if the 10 is white and the remaing rings are black. I think the smaller target forces you to concentrate more on that small point (the 10) instead of a black mass of 6-10.

Try cutting out a 10 ring on a target and mount it on a white backdrop. Shoot a few target and see if your scores improve.
Larry

jdub

Sometimes when I'm trying to shoot the tightest groups possible with a scoped airgun I will purposely adjust the scope about 1/2" high and then put a small black dot on the paper as my aim point.   The shots will all group 1/2" low and my aim point never gets a big hole in it.   

I do this when testing new pellets because even a .177 diameter hole is too big of a target to aim at consistently with a scope. 

cmj21973

"Aim small, miss small."

So true.
When I'm shooting chipmunks, squirrels, or any small animal I aim for an eye or ear hole. I either hit what I'm aim for or the surrounding area. Either way it's a head shot.