Re: Calls and Strikes
NQR,
You say a lot, and all of it is Not Quite Right and really says nothing at all...
And Sterling you offer nothing only a question... well target analysis is done constantly and requires no call or plotting. That implies the shooter is not seeing the sights on the target, which if he is honest and objective should be able to say if the shot is good or bad, without plotting it. It can be made that simple for them. Was the reticle on target and was the break good or bad... it's a yes or no answer.
To explain how we look at Target Analysis, I will start by saying that is the first thing we do at Rifles Only. Jacob gives a safety brief and then before anything is said we ask the shooters to bring their equipment and 5 rounds to the 100 yard line. Without anything from us, good, bad or indifferent we ask them to shoot a group. We focus on their body mechanics and let the target speak for it's self. We record notes on each shooter, noting body position, trigger, breathing, among other things. Here is an example of Fundamentals' Analysis Target shot <span style="text-decoration: underline">this week at Rifles Only </span>
We then talk about what is seen here on the target, the vertical elements the horizontal elements as well we go into our way of explaining the fundamentals.
<span style="font-style: italic">Here is the same shooter, 4 days later at 100 yards</span>:
So clearly the methods work and trust me when I say, this one of several similar groups, not a cherry picked example, but one we happen to have.
Sterling, you are welcome to give me your target analysis of this, I know what I look for, but I would welcome your input.
We also do target analysis using the dot drill <span style="font-weight: bold">but more importantly we watch the shooter</span>. <span style="font-style: italic">We don't stand back and just let them shoot,</span> we analysis their body mechanics and can spot the problems most don't even see. I am sure many have seen people <span style="font-style: italic"> "Tap"</span> the trigger, failing to follow through. Well the average shooter rarely knows they are doing this, or considers it normal, but it's easy to spot and 99% of the time they have no clue what is happening.
A great example of this, shooting the moving target, when ambushing the target, people will mentally say, <span style="font-style: italic">"Now"</span> and shoulder the rifle, pushing into the shot. This dumps the round low, in fact we saw a shooter push the strike 63" low at 500 yards, 3.5 mils in my Spotter. He had no idea he did that, but a lot of people do. Shooting a moving target is a skill that requires perfect execution or things happen of which the shooter has no idea, yet we as instructor see it.
With Target analysis we show the shooter how to diagnose problem targets like the first one so they can correct these issues, whether they be trigger control, breathing, anticipation, shouldering, NPA, the gamut. It's explained in detail how to "read" the target... the Call and Plot, well the shot was either or good or bad, as I said earlier most of the time the shooter knows before the shot is fired if it is a good break or bad one. We emphasis not pushing a bad shot, and by focusing on the target and reticle you can actually see if the crosshairs are moving off target.
Speaking in terms of Traditional Sniping, well what is traditional sniping anyway ?
In WWI or WWII snipers were lone gunman not working in teams, there was no sniper / spotter dynamic. That didn't happen until much later in Vietnam, and into the 1980's Even Hathcock was known to work alone much of the time. So who is to say this is right.
A great example of today, Mission: High level taliban is located in a village compounds, your job is to support a raid to extract him. Village is known to be hostile to US forces. Insert via helicopter to adjacent structure to provide overwatch / cover of assaulting forces.
Well do you want your Spotter with his head in the glass or actually on his rifle providing security ? Are you gonna exit the bird, run over to set up, then call time out while you lay your kit out, the spotter gets set up, and everything is perfect or you gonna scramble to position, cover the assault and put down bad guys... Is that not traditional...
You can mention any sniper unit in the world, like the Canadians, I am well aware of how they operate, and have worked with a lot of them. So what is the point, that your perception of sniping is flawed, and we'd like to think things are sniperific with the spotter calling shots, or the reality that shit happens, things move fast, and we find engagements are more dynamic than the 1000 yard low crawl to take an enemy General.
The call is simple, good or bad, focus on the reticle and you know, if you dick it up, fix it, then practice your fundamentals down the road. Calling and plotting need be no more complex than that... and certainly the top targets tells me all I know, they needed to work on their fundamentals from the beginning, trigger, breathing and NPA are all at issue here. I know what is wrong, and don't even have to look at the shooter. No call or plot is necessary.
Now, we can suppose, use interesting keywords, but that doesn't help anyone become a better shooter. Details matter, which is what we provide, not vague generalities.