Target or Reticle Focus

Sorry, what i meant is do you look at the reticle or the target when you press the trigger?
It depends....
If I am shooting a static target and trying real hard for a tight group, well stabilized, I look at the reticle.
If that target is moving, I tend to focus on the target and the lead I need to make a hit.

EDIT: But I am no top notch shooter...
 
When dealing with optics, you are able to have the reticle and image on the same focal plane. So you don't need to concentrate one or the other like irons.

That's the short answer. The long answer is going to be dependent on things like how much time you have, is the target moving, etc etc.

But the overall idea is that since both are on the same focal plane, you just focus on fundamentals to make the smallest amount of wobble and break clean shots. Without the need to hyper focus on either target or reticle more than the other.


Of course when you have something like heavy mirage, then you're going to shift more focus to the reticle.
 
When dealing with optics, you are able to have the reticle and image on the same focal plane. So you don't need to concentrate one or the other like irons.

That's the short answer. The long answer is going to be dependent on things like how much time you have, is the target moving, etc etc.

But the overall idea is that since both are on the same focal plane, you just focus on fundamentals to make the smallest amount of wobble and break clean shots. Without the need to hyper focus on either target or reticle more than the other.


Of course when you have something like heavy mirage, then you're going to shift more focus to the reticle.
Thank you. Follow up questions 🙂. In your opinion what creates the smaller wobble zone? Maybe being too hyper focused creates tension, making the wobble zone larger?
How about when you are zeroing your rifle and trying to make tight groups?
 
It depends....
If I am shooting a static target and trying real hard for a tight group, well stabilized, I look at the reticle.
If that target is moving, I tend to focus on the target and the lead I need to make a hit.

EDIT: But I am no top notch shooter...
Thank you very helpful
When considering the “fundamentals of marksmanship”, that also includes Front Sight focus along with the others; NPA, breathing, etc. The front sight has been replaced by the reticle, but the fundamentals are still the same.
Yes. i have always been taught this and have taught this as a pistol instructor, but there has been a lot of new research and things are moving more towards target focus (even with iron sights). I am new to precision rifle and am trying to learn if those principles transfer. I have found my wobble zone is mess when i am target focused but hasn’t necessarily translated to better shooting (i know a lot is simply me as shooter)
 
but there has been a lot of new research and things are moving more towards target focus (even with iron sights).
Ok, if precision rifle is going that route then follow the research. F-class/XTC/Benchrest are the old fudd sports I participate most of the time and they are all sticking with front sight/reticle focus since that question comes up a lot with new shooters. I do see that action pistol such as IDPA and USPSA are moving to a "Hard Target Focus" for faster times.
 
Definitely situational dependent. I'm absolutely focusing on quadrasecting paper bullseyes and steel silhouettes, and probably focus on the reticle more when target shooting. As said above, with both being on the same focal plane you aren't forced to put a clear object over a blurry one or vice versa.

Shooting at live stuff, I'm paying just as much attention to the animal, trying to anticipate any movement that might cause my round to be off...as well as observing the environmental factors. I definitely lose track of the reticle and remain on the animal during recoil.
 
Definitely situational dependent. I'm absolutely focusing on quadrasecting paper bullseyes and steel silhouettes, and probably focus on the reticle more when target shooting. As said above, with both being on the same focal plane you aren't forced to put a clear object over a blurry one or vice versa.

Shooting at live stuff, I'm paying just as much attention to the animal, trying to anticipate any movement that might cause my round to be off...as well as observing the environmental factors. I definitely lose track of the reticle and remain on the animal during recoil.
I know when I'm after coyotes, if I don't get them first round, it's a rarity that I get them on the second round or third. Since I don't really care if I shoot them in the leg or brain them, I go ahead and take shots 2 and 3 if I can. But I remain focused on that dog and not the reticle. I will very very rarely shoot the first round at a moving dog. I have a friend who is just next level at shooting them on the move. I'm not that good. I watch with my finger on the trigger waiting for them to stop. They don't usually sit or stand in one spot for more than a second or two and I have only rarely had one stop after taking the first shot. Usually they are gone as fast as they can get gone. Suppressed doesn't seem to make any real difference, they are getting gone. I have hit them as they are doing 40 mph but I'd lay that more to luck than skill. Not my buddy, though, he does it often enough that I would say it is skill. I tease him that he can't hit them first round because they are too still.

Sighting in a rifle or doing load development, I get myself and rifle as stable as possible and I pay much more attention to that crosshair and I pay real close attention to where that crosshair is when the shot breaks. i can usually tell that THAT shot hit where the crosshairs where when it left the barrel. Not every time though.

As for the wobble mentioned....that's sorta what I'm talking about. I USUALLY zero at max magnification. However, when shooting groups with friends (I still have 2) I can usually get better results at mid magnification. Less wobble that I can see, not that there is less wobble.

Iron sights? Well, even with my glasses on, that's nearly a lost art for me. Age takes a toll. I do best when I have the rifle zeroed with the post at 6 o'clock, so the circle of the target is resting on that post and the impacts are actually above point of aim. But that is for the NRA type black target and doesn't work on others unless I make an adjustment to the sights...M1 Garand, 1903A3, M1A1 rifles. I can tell that the black circle is on the post easily but I'll be damned if I can see that bullseye and the post.
 
Caylen touched on this on a recent MDS episode. I believe he has changed from the way he used to do things. Might be episode 99, but I'm not sure.
 
When considering the “fundamentals of marksmanship”, that also includes Front Sight focus along with the others; NPA, breathing, etc. The front sight has been replaced by the reticle, but the fundamentals are still the same.

This is simply not true. You don't just assume that you "replace" the front sight with the reticle. That's not taught in most any precision rifle course. Iron sights and magnified optics are not the same.

Take a course like Rifles Only or any other known course and we'll touch on parallax and thats about it.
 
Thank you. Follow up questions 🙂. In your opinion what creates the smaller wobble zone? Maybe being too hyper focused creates tension, making the wobble zone larger?
How about when you are zeroing your rifle and trying to make tight groups?

You apply the fundamentals of marksmanship in all scenarios. Anything else is in your head or you're applying fundamentals incorrectly.

You'll have to figure out through training and experience what acceptable wobble is giving your position and equipment. A 25lb rifle on a sandbag is going to have far less wobble than a 13lbs rifle on a lightweight bag with poly beads.

When zero'ing the rifle, you have the opportunity to perfectly perform fundamentals and you should have zero perceived wobble.


And on another note, perceived wobble in alternate positions is all in your head. You have the same amount of wobble at 10x that you do at 30x magnification. So, train yourself to not care about perceived wobble.
 
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According to Ryan Cleckner, author of "Long Range Shooting Manual" and formerly sniper team leader in the 1st Ranger Battalion 75th Ranger Regiment for a number of deployments in the GWOT, focus on the reticle after target acquisition. That is, find the zone of the object in the scope but focus on the reticle cross hairs or hold-overs.

Edited to add:

I should have prefaced that with the fact that Cleckner calls himself a tactical shooter. His job as a sniper and team leader in the rangers was to put .300 Win Mag pill into an IPSC shaped target, rather than piercing the earlobe. So, focusing on the reticle works well for that. But I imagine others may have different experiences shooting long range targets that are sized only at 1 MOA.

So, for example, Cleckner might not get a gong on the first round at the Texas Plinking 1K challenge. But he would definitely take down an enemy agent at distance.
 
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I’m with Makinchips208 on this one. Having shot stock pistol a ton I have switched to target focus even with irons. It works for everything for me. It works with my 25 power nightforce, my 1-8 vortex, and the irons on my Glock pistol.
 
I always focus on the reticle. However, the unspoken element in this thread is the magnification used. Your wobble zone will drop as your magnification drops. In the last class I took from Frank, he had an exercise where you fired 3x3 shot groups at a small target at 100 yards. There were small numbers on the target at different positions. You fired 3 shots at each number. The first group was shot at 5X, then 10X, and then 20X.

I and others shot the best groups when set at 5X. I used to shoot at 16X for most distances but now it is more like 10-12X until shooting beyond 700 yards.

YMMV
 
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If you can hold 100% steady on a static target it likely doesn't mater, it's also probably a bit less of an issue with a scope because when properly adjusted both the retile and target should be in clear focus. Outside of that situation it depends, not just on the situation but your own mind. The mental aspect of shooting is probably one of the least focused on, but most important aspects, especially when it comes to accepting that everyone's brain is different, and a certain technique or training will not work for everyone. Doesn't matter if it's handgun, shotgun, rifle, archery etc. Your own brain and personality matter, you just can't train out personality all the time, you are often better to adjust your shooting style for what works for you. When we shot at the olympic training center in the 90's we spent way more time on the mental game than shooting, by far. That concept was foreign to most shooters at the time, still is. Many find shooting with less magnification less "stressful" the same is true for shooting at just big targets with no distinct aiming spot. The downside is both of those things reduce maximum possible precision. I say possible because they can also induce/magnify bad habits that will hurt precision.

We've all seen it, guy shoots at a huge target has big groups, puts a tiny orange dot up and the groups shrink up, aim small miss small. It's very common in archery, guys will shoot at an 8" paper plate and have 6" groups, but they put a 1" orange dot up and those groups shrink up to 3". It's one of the harder parts of 3D archery, you don't get a clear distinct aiming spot often but in reality you're trying to hit a 1" 12 ring that looks the same as everything around it. However a tiny aiming spot and too much magnification can get "stressful" for the brain trying to be too perfect and guys hammer the trigger, jerk the gun, tense up, stop breathing etc.

I've shot target focused with a handgun for decades, against all my instructors advice at close range, not one has ever complained about my groups. Only recently has it become talked about as a viable technique. At longer distances, or where precision is key, I'll switch to front site, but for 98% of the scenarios I encounter in courses, it's much faster, for me. That does not work for everyone, many can't switch after decades of doing it one way, some can't maintain accuracy etc. etc. I probably did it because I grew up shooting a shotgun instinctively and shot more rounds of 12ga before I was 15 than most do their entire lives and it was just more natural to see the handgun sights in my peripheral focus and focusing on the target, than focusing on the front sight.

Sight "wobble", doesn't matter if it's handgun, archery, rifle etc. can mess with your head, it seems to work against archers and offhand shooters the most. It's very difficult to train some people to not "hammer" a trigger when their sight picture is moving, we call it drive by shooting, I've seen other shooters that physically will freeze unable to pull the trigger. In some cases you simply can't remove the wobble and you have to accept it. Offhand shooters often "learn" their wobble pattern and try to predict it breaking the shot. Type B personality people rarely have issues with it, Type A tend to struggle. It can lead to flinching, punching, jerking, all kinds of bad things, just like recoil bothers some people more than others. Like most things one method of shooting won't work for everyone and neither will one method of training.

The subconscious can see, track, and make movement much faster than we consciously do, if the brain starts to get nervous and panic because there's too much wobble, all kinds of bad shooting habits can start to creep in. Some shooters struggle for years with them, I've seen shooters with amazing bench/prone fundamentals and when you put them in a position they have to deal with sight movement all those fundamentals go out the window. The same is true for some handgun shooters when they have to learn to shoot on the move.

Lots of ways to skin a cat, most top shooters in any discipline, don't do things exactly the same, they've all modified their techniques and training to maximize their performance.
 
If you can hold 100% steady on a static target it likely doesn't mater, it's also probably a bit less of an issue with a scope because when properly adjusted both the retile and target should be in clear focus. Outside of that situation it depends, not just on the situation but your own mind. The mental aspect of shooting is probably one of the least focused on, but most important aspects, especially when it comes to accepting that everyone's brain is different, and a certain technique or training will not work for everyone. Doesn't matter if it's handgun, shotgun, rifle, archery etc. Your own brain and personality matter, you just can't train out personality all the time, you are often better to adjust your shooting style for what works for you. When we shot at the olympic training center in the 90's we spent way more time on the mental game than shooting, by far. That concept was foreign to most shooters at the time, still is. Many find shooting with less magnification less "stressful" the same is true for shooting at just big targets with no distinct aiming spot. The downside is both of those things reduce maximum possible precision. I say possible because they can also induce/magnify bad habits that will hurt precision.

We've all seen it, guy shoots at a huge target has big groups, puts a tiny orange dot up and the groups shrink up, aim small miss small. It's very common in archery, guys will shoot at an 8" paper plate and have 6" groups, but they put a 1" orange dot up and those groups shrink up to 3". It's one of the harder parts of 3D archery, you don't get a clear distinct aiming spot often but in reality you're trying to hit a 1" 12 ring that looks the same as everything around it. However a tiny aiming spot and too much magnification can get "stressful" for the brain trying to be too perfect and guys hammer the trigger, jerk the gun, tense up, stop breathing etc.

I've shot target focused with a handgun for decades, against all my instructors advice at close range, not one has ever complained about my groups. Only recently has it become talked about as a viable technique. At longer distances, or where precision is key, I'll switch to front site, but for 98% of the scenarios I encounter in courses, it's much faster, for me. That does not work for everyone, many can't switch after decades of doing it one way, some can't maintain accuracy etc. etc. I probably did it because I grew up shooting a shotgun instinctively and shot more rounds of 12ga before I was 15 than most do their entire lives and it was just more natural to see the handgun sights in my peripheral focus and focusing on the target, than focusing on the front sight.

Sight "wobble", doesn't matter if it's handgun, archery, rifle etc. can mess with your head, it seems to work against archers and offhand shooters the most. It's very difficult to train some people to not "hammer" a trigger when their sight picture is moving, we call it drive by shooting, I've seen other shooters that physically will freeze unable to pull the trigger. In some cases you simply can't remove the wobble and you have to accept it. Offhand shooters often "learn" their wobble pattern and try to predict it breaking the shot. Type B personality people rarely have issues with it, Type A tend to struggle. It can lead to flinching, punching, jerking, all kinds of bad things, just like recoil bothers some people more than others. Like most things one method of shooting won't work for everyone and neither will one method of training.

The subconscious can see, track, and make movement much faster than we consciously do, if the brain starts to get nervous and panic because there's too much wobble, all kinds of bad shooting habits can start to creep in. Some shooters struggle for years with them, I've seen shooters with amazing bench/prone fundamentals and when you put them in a position they have to deal with sight movement all those fundamentals go out the window. The same is true for some handgun shooters when they have to learn to shoot on the move.

Lots of ways to skin a cat, most top shooters in any discipline, don't do things exactly the same, they've all modified their techniques and training to maximize their performance.
Wow! You said a mouthful and it’s all good info!
 
@ToddM post #22 was really good. Especially the bit about individual idosyncracies.

For example, squeezing the trigger at the momentary repiratory pause. That is good. But what happened was that for a few people, the bottom of the cycle worked for them and that is what they taught. Exhale, pause, squeeze.

That did not work for me. My pause is closer to the top of a regular relaxed breath. Most importantly, where there is the least wobble.

I am not going to booger flick the trigger but I hunt, so I sight in and practice with the butt against my shoulder, which can introduce movement.

That makes me a bit more patient so that I can wait until settled.

I find myself looking at both or alternating between reticle and PoA.
 
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The diopter ring is the most overlooked (often ignored) adjustment on the scope of a novice to intermediate shooter. It should be adjusted to produce a sharp reticle at a glance, as opposed to a stare. Your eye will adjust if you stare, so make sure it is sharp at a glance. This may require a gross adjustment, then a few fine adjustments to get it really sharp. It's like wearing prescription glasses that are slightly wrong prescription. Your eye will adjust for it , but that is not ideal.


Your parallax is resolved when your reticle and the target are on the same focal plane. Target focus is gross adjustment and resolution of parallax is a fine adjustment.

If your reticle floats over the target when you move your head slightly in the eye relief, you have parallax, and it will produce error at the shot. Resolve it. Especially at the closer shot distances.

1. Always a crisp reticle.
2. Always a target that is in focus and the reticle is "stuck to it".

3. Press - Break - Freeze