So I was watching videos today, of Olympic shooting and of long-range centerfire competitions, and I noticed that in the prone, the head position was markedly different between shooters in the two sports: The Olympians hold their heads vertical -- ears level, with the comb just pressed against the side of their face -- while the centerfire guys generally have their heads tilted, sometimes as much as 30 degrees or more, and are basically resting their head on the comb.
I've done way more pistol shooting than rifle shooting, and of course my head is level when I'm shooting a pistol. But I do tilt my head on my rifle a little in order to get my eye comfortably behind the scope. I just tried some pistol dry-fire with my head cocked to the side and it felt awful -- maybe I could get used to it, but I certainly can't see it making me a better shot.
So why do the long-range competitors not hold their heads level?
I've got some ideas, some of which may be stupid, which is why I'm posting in this subforum:
I've done way more pistol shooting than rifle shooting, and of course my head is level when I'm shooting a pistol. But I do tilt my head on my rifle a little in order to get my eye comfortably behind the scope. I just tried some pistol dry-fire with my head cocked to the side and it felt awful -- maybe I could get used to it, but I certainly can't see it making me a better shot.
So why do the long-range competitors not hold their heads level?
I've got some ideas, some of which may be stupid, which is why I'm posting in this subforum:
- Maybe the sports are so different that it's inappropriate to compare techniques between them in the first place: Long-range shooters get bags and bipods, recoil management is a huge part of their game, etc. Maybe head position makes a big difference for one sport but falls into the noise for the other.
- Working snipers need to stay on the scope for long periods of time, so maybe they get used to -- and then train others to employ -- positions that let them relax their neck muscles by actually resting on the stock.
- The Olympic rifles are obviously more adjustable; maybe the long-range guys would also have their ears level if only their combs were laterally adjustable.
- Maybe head position doesn't actually make any difference when shooting prone, and the Olympians' ears are only level because that's how they've always done it -- or because it does make a difference when they're standing, and they want to have consistent form.
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