Re: Moving from the Bench to Prone sights are off?
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: CoryT</div><div class="ubbcode-body">I've shot plenty of service rifles, but I gave up the National Match stuff after my college Rifle Team days.
I was getting the impression you were trying to say something about the appearance of the sights having an effect on the zero.
For what it's worth, the fact is no stock weld is actually required. If the front sight is centered in the rear sight, the sights are aligned. You can't see the sights as aligned without having your eye on the same line as the sights. Take for example, a folding stock AK, where I can't actually get any real stock contact. It's certainly simpler to achieve the alignment with a consistent stock weld, but that's all. If stock weld were actually important or required, as Frank notes, pistols would be REALLY hard to shoot.
Followthrough is an means to an end. It's a method to achieve the focus required to align the sights on the target, then activate the trigger without disturbing that alignment. Once the bullet has left the barrel, where the rifle goes is of no factor whatsoever in the path of the bullet. It may or may not tell us something about how that shot was fired. A lack of any followthrough on the shooters part does not mean the downrange result WILL be bad, it just increases the chances that the shooter made an error in the shot process.
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Gee, where do I start, you have so little comprehension of shooting facts. First, sight alignment must be seen where the tip of the front post appears to be centered in the rear aperture. If the shooter selects some alternative sight appearance, with a sight having been earlier zeroed using the tip of the post centered in the rear aperture, then bullets will not go where aimed. Since it's an angular concept, misses are assured at distance when alignment is not perfect. BTW, since the brain tends to naturally center things, proper sight alignment will always be one where the post tip is centered in the rear aperture, as it's easier to recognize when this particular front to rear sight relationship has been perfected. And, although sight alignment can be established and perhaps maintained without stockweld, a good cheek roll helps to anchor alignment, as well as support the position-surely you remember, from your college days, the factors of a steady position: butt-to-shoulder, stockweld, non-firing hand, elbows, and grip.
Follow through, maintaining aim until recoil has subsided, is necessary to indeed assure the bullet has cleared the bore before the shooter becomes more muscularly relaxed, which he will likely become after executing the firing task. If the shooter does not consciencely follow through, aim will not likely be maintained until the bullet has cleared the bore.
Follow through, when focus is where it should be, on the front sight, allows the shooter to call his shots. Calling shots is, of course, essential to shooter/target analysis.
Perhaps, if you did not drop out of competitive shooting, these shooting facts would be more meaningful. With comprehension of all concepts important to good shooting you might be able to reach a higher plateau of good shooting and perhaps become an extraordinary marksman. It seems from your comments you do not yet grasp the importance of some things essential to good shooting. Did you drop out of competition because success was not available for what limited shooting knowledge you were able to muster. What I see often are folks who confuse executing the firing task with actually knowing how to shoot. These folks can get the job done on relatively big targets at relatively short distances, but fall apart as the distance to target increases.
BTW, that comment you made about the AK, thanks for supporting my observations, although the AK will always shoot in the direction it's pointed, understanding exactly where it's pointed may not be possible, and thus, getting exact hits may not be possible at anything other than short distance.
Now, this is not fact, but, it is what I belive-an instructur needs not only know what's important to good shooting but why. You seem to know what's important, but you appear not to know why. I'm certain if I did not understand how it all works I would not be a very effective instructor. Even though all firing takes place at the weapon, the instructor is still important to shot analysis, since the student typically does not know what to do about correcting zeros whether shots go on-call or not.