here's a dumb question - what book would you recommend to someone wanting to get started in long range shooting?..
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Nice little list you have there lol. I might have to check some of those out.Hi ra2bach,
I read your question differently to David, rather than what databook (a search of this website will reveal some good recent discussion regarding data books and what people use them for) I am interpreting it to be which instructional book would be best to get you started. I recommend, assuming you are a field style shooter:
Snipercraft. Laying the groundwork for a career as a sniper. John C. Simpson
It is a great introduction, contains live and dry fire drills, building positions.
There are other good books as you progress:
The windbook for rifle shooters. Miller and Cunningham.
Secrets of Mental marksmanship. Miller and Cunningham.
Practical shooters guide. Marcus Blanchard
With winning in mind. Lanny bassham.
100+ sniper exercises. Fontcberla. Paladin press
These are the ones that I find myself going back to time after time.
For audio visual reference - Rifles only on Vimeo and Frank Galli on snipers hide training. I like Franks the best.
Enjoying the journey down the rabbit hole?
Think I misread your question, if you mean how to type books, I'd recommend Ryan Cleckners book, "long range shooting handbook" to start with. He breaks everything down in simple terms. After that maybe something along the line of "applied ballistics" by Brian litz
Yeah we are. The podcasts are a great resource. Listen to them everyday driving to and from work.I'm reading it right now, pretty staight forward, Mr. Cleckner does a great job. That book, coupled with the pod casts and this site has really expedited my learning curve. We are extremely fortunate to have a stable of professionals and journeymen on this site who freely share their knowledge!
Mike
Hi ra2bach,
I read your question differently to David, rather than what databook (a search of this website will reveal some good recent discussion regarding data books and what people use them for) I am interpreting it to be which instructional book would be best to get you started. I recommend, assuming you are a field style shooter:
Snipercraft. Laying the groundwork for a career as a sniper. John C. Simpson
It is a great introduction, contains live and dry fire drills, building positions.
There are other good books as you progress:
The windbook for rifle shooters. Miller and Cunningham.
Secrets of Mental marksmanship. Miller and Cunningham.
Practical shooters guide. Marcus Blanchard
With winning in mind. Lanny bassham.
100+ sniper exercises. Fontcberla. Paladin press
These are the ones that I find myself going back to time after time.
For audio visual reference - Rifles only on Vimeo and Frank Galli on snipers hide training. I like Franks the best.
Enjoying the journey down the rabbit hole?
Hi ra2bach,
Snipercraft. Laying the groundwork for a career as a sniper. John C. Simpson
It is a great introduction, contains live and dry fire drills, building positions.
There are other good books as you progress:
Secrets of Mental marksmanship. Miller and Cunningham.
Practical shooters guide. Marcus Blanchard
100+ sniper exercises. Fontcberla. Paladin press
These are the ones that I find myself going back to time after time.
For audio visual reference - Rifles only on Vimeo and Frank Galli on snipers hide training. I like Franks the best.
Enjoying the journey down the rabbit hole?
I got the printed version. The pictures and illustrations are worth the price. Helped me to understand the shooting positions by referring to the pictures. The old saying, A picture is worth a thousand words, hold true with this book. When I dry fire, Ill refer to the pictures, just to keep things straight in my feeble mind!haha, yeah, sorry for the confusion. I was asking about instructional books to read but a side benefit was I hooked a reply about shooting log books, which I need to think about as well. thanks for reminding me.
when I was shooting benchrest-type rifle I had a special printed target that I could record shot/load/condition data on and I kept them in a ring binder. now I need something as this isn't practical shooting steel...
Ryan Cleckner's book is available in printed and e-book versions. I prefer e-book for most reading but would you get the printed version, for illustrations, etc?..
I got the printed version. The pictures and illustrations are worth the price. Helped me to understand the shooting positions by referring to the pictures. The old saying, A picture is worth a thousand words, hold true with this book. When I dry fire, Ill refer to the pictures, just to keep things straight in my feeble mind!
Mike
Dont really know, Im still stuck in 1976. I just learned to post pictures a few weeks ago! Perhaps some of the more with it members can help.oh. I was hoping to get the Kindle version. the pics will show up on Kindle Fire though, right?..
oh. I was hoping to get the Kindle version. the pics will show up on Kindle Fire though, right?..
honestly....if you are brand spanking new......skip the books.
books can help refine techniques, and diagnose problems.......but they cant teach you to shoot.
i would get some actual instruction......learn to build a solid foundation.....and fully understand why you are doing what youre doing.....then go ahead and get some learning material.