I wish there was some clarity on the theory behind using less magnification being better. I can see that less magnification means less wobble and therefore less "chasing the wobble" if you're "trying to aim". As my new instructor says, "you don't need to practice aiming". That after 3 million years of hurling projectiles accurately we already know how to aim, in fact "trying to aim" only interferes with the shot. The dry firing is training the old animal brain to feel the shot and keep our modern mind out of the way.
Anyway, given all that, I still don't see why you would ever want less magnification, such that as you hear a lot of people say, that shooting at 1000 yards is better done at lower powers like 10X even if you have a 25X scope. I see wobble at 25X, so what, I expect my subconscious to time it all out. Just like when I used to shoot archery we did this, I only practiced shooting a bail of hay in my garage every day and then when we went to the field I was hitting bullseyes all over the place even though there was tons of wobble in the sight picture. Trusting the "feel" of my body and releasing on rhythm instead of "aim", it was magic.
Any thoughts on this?
Anyway, given all that, I still don't see why you would ever want less magnification, such that as you hear a lot of people say, that shooting at 1000 yards is better done at lower powers like 10X even if you have a 25X scope. I see wobble at 25X, so what, I expect my subconscious to time it all out. Just like when I used to shoot archery we did this, I only practiced shooting a bail of hay in my garage every day and then when we went to the field I was hitting bullseyes all over the place even though there was tons of wobble in the sight picture. Trusting the "feel" of my body and releasing on rhythm instead of "aim", it was magic.
Any thoughts on this?