Is excelling at competitions with a 6mm/20+lb rifle an example of practical marksmanship (in general)?
Practical can mean many things to different personalities (staying in the short action .308 bolt face arena). Could mean what gives you the best chance of beating your opponent (low recoil/faster bullet = lighter bullet/heavy gun)- 6mmXYZ/competition. Could mean what gives you the best chance of a 1 shot hit and knock down (higher energy at target = quick/heavier bullet) - 7mm08, hunting. Could mean all of those but with better barrel life and maneuverability (retained energy, simple) - .308, military. Could mean a balance of barrel life, speed, retained energy and maneuverable weight with manageable recoil - 6.5mm (my bias for now).
Ive considered a 6mm rifle but am hesitant - I keep thinking its a cheater rifle of sorts. Its already the lowest recoiling of the ones listed above, and almost everybody I see shooting 6mm has 20lb+ attached to it. It is the result IMO of too much focus on 10 shot/hits on 1 target, basically just running the bolt, and not enough emphasis on PRACTICALITY. This is a generalization, but the pattern I see on the whole.
When you start football/basketball at a young age you get a smaller ball to throw/shoot - it makes the game easier and can hide minute flaws (but at that age more just makes the game more fun - like a trainer .22 rifle (ammo cost big factor there)). But you grow up and they switch to 'bigger balls' to challenge the individuals' skill level more and make them excel in all areas of the game.
In that same vein I think the 6mm train will be fleeting because it either covers up flaws in ones 'marksmanship' game or gives unfair advantage to advanced level shooters, creating a chasm between amateurs and pros that seems to favor status quo/unfair (like if one team got to use smaller balls all the time (or deflated ones lol)) - 30yd throws become easier; 30ft shots go in more often.
My view is the better you are at a sport, the more you should challenge yourself (in basketball they use smaller rims to build 3pt accuracy). There is an aspect of 'simply winning' and if you could choose anything - what makes you the hardest to beat? But I think 6mm/20+lb has become too much about making you look better versus actually making your overall marksmanship better.
Do you disagree?
*Does anyone use a lightweight 6mm gun? That sounds semi-interesting but I wonder why not just use a light 6.5CM at that point?
Practical can mean many things to different personalities (staying in the short action .308 bolt face arena). Could mean what gives you the best chance of beating your opponent (low recoil/faster bullet = lighter bullet/heavy gun)- 6mmXYZ/competition. Could mean what gives you the best chance of a 1 shot hit and knock down (higher energy at target = quick/heavier bullet) - 7mm08, hunting. Could mean all of those but with better barrel life and maneuverability (retained energy, simple) - .308, military. Could mean a balance of barrel life, speed, retained energy and maneuverable weight with manageable recoil - 6.5mm (my bias for now).
Ive considered a 6mm rifle but am hesitant - I keep thinking its a cheater rifle of sorts. Its already the lowest recoiling of the ones listed above, and almost everybody I see shooting 6mm has 20lb+ attached to it. It is the result IMO of too much focus on 10 shot/hits on 1 target, basically just running the bolt, and not enough emphasis on PRACTICALITY. This is a generalization, but the pattern I see on the whole.
When you start football/basketball at a young age you get a smaller ball to throw/shoot - it makes the game easier and can hide minute flaws (but at that age more just makes the game more fun - like a trainer .22 rifle (ammo cost big factor there)). But you grow up and they switch to 'bigger balls' to challenge the individuals' skill level more and make them excel in all areas of the game.
In that same vein I think the 6mm train will be fleeting because it either covers up flaws in ones 'marksmanship' game or gives unfair advantage to advanced level shooters, creating a chasm between amateurs and pros that seems to favor status quo/unfair (like if one team got to use smaller balls all the time (or deflated ones lol)) - 30yd throws become easier; 30ft shots go in more often.
My view is the better you are at a sport, the more you should challenge yourself (in basketball they use smaller rims to build 3pt accuracy). There is an aspect of 'simply winning' and if you could choose anything - what makes you the hardest to beat? But I think 6mm/20+lb has become too much about making you look better versus actually making your overall marksmanship better.
Do you disagree?
*Does anyone use a lightweight 6mm gun? That sounds semi-interesting but I wonder why not just use a light 6.5CM at that point?