Hi all,
Long time reader, first time poster on the Forum. Being from and hunting primarily in New England all my life, and being new to long-range shooting, I've realized very quickly that things that don't make much of a difference at 100yds have dramatic accuracy effects at 250+yds. Had a question that I'm having trouble finding an answer on by searching threads... will try to explain this clearly...
I noticed while shooting bipod/prone with a small bag under the stock last weekend that my cheek pressure/cheek weld on the stock has an effect on the rifle's point of aim in the sense that, all other movings parts and joints held as motionless as possible, my crosshairs drift about 1MOA down and 2 MOA left when I apply my cheek weld on the gun vs. it not contacting the gun (i.e., the shift is observed while the gun is supported by bipod and shoulder/bag only while keeping my eye on plane with the scope, and just rotating my head minutely to apply/relieve stock pressure).
I was shooting consistently about .75MOA with the rifle (which is pillar and epoxy bedded) at 100yds and this has never presented a noticible problem, but I just happen to notice, and my question boils down to this... Is that okay, or am I doing something wrong (albeat consistent and repeatable) that is putting stress on the gun in an underisable way?
Thank you to anyone that can provide some insight.
Long time reader, first time poster on the Forum. Being from and hunting primarily in New England all my life, and being new to long-range shooting, I've realized very quickly that things that don't make much of a difference at 100yds have dramatic accuracy effects at 250+yds. Had a question that I'm having trouble finding an answer on by searching threads... will try to explain this clearly...
I noticed while shooting bipod/prone with a small bag under the stock last weekend that my cheek pressure/cheek weld on the stock has an effect on the rifle's point of aim in the sense that, all other movings parts and joints held as motionless as possible, my crosshairs drift about 1MOA down and 2 MOA left when I apply my cheek weld on the gun vs. it not contacting the gun (i.e., the shift is observed while the gun is supported by bipod and shoulder/bag only while keeping my eye on plane with the scope, and just rotating my head minutely to apply/relieve stock pressure).
I was shooting consistently about .75MOA with the rifle (which is pillar and epoxy bedded) at 100yds and this has never presented a noticible problem, but I just happen to notice, and my question boils down to this... Is that okay, or am I doing something wrong (albeat consistent and repeatable) that is putting stress on the gun in an underisable way?
Thank you to anyone that can provide some insight.