Since we clogged the heck out of jbell's "So you think you can shoot" thread; I figured the polite way to continue the great discussion going on in that thread is to start a new one.
We've all heard the adage about the Archer vs. the Arrow. We've all heard of the guy with "inferior" equipment that outdoes the "state of the art." Most people have a soft-spot for the under-dog... heck, I still remember every shot of my first Sporting Clays tourney when I beat all the guys with the $15K Kreighoffs with my old Remington 1100.
We started to get into the conversation of the advancements that come from learning to shoot vs. equipment as well as the merits of certain equipment/action styles. This conversation involved many of the guys here that I would call "the shooters" as well as several fantastic, new members. It is one of those rare times when a civil, interesting dialogue developed and I'd like to keep it going.
To get us started, Frank Green was great enough to bring a great point to the table - (I'm paraphrasing) that if your equipment is beyond reproach; then you "know" that any issues that are present with the results on the target come from the shooter.
My personal thought is that if you can afford the best... then get the best. I've lived my life by that credo and there have been plenty of times when I COULDN'T afford the best. In relating my personal POV to the marksmanship scene; not everyone can afford a 40X, Annie, etc... does this mean that the "Archer" can't hone his skill? In my belief - YES they can. My thought is that every rifle has a level of capability. If your rifle shoots 2-3 MOA then that is just fine as long as it is consistently shooting that 2-3 MOA. You can still derive a level of deviation that would be a result of the shooter. Is this the optimum way? Of course not... but it CAN work.
In my humble experience, NOTHING can overcome the benefits that come from trigger time.
Obviously, if you've read the mentioned thread; this is just the tip of the iceberg of that discussion - but it has to start somewhere. So lets talk about it... and please... refrain from the "all day long" "in the right conditions" "if I do my part" comments! LOL!!
~ Rico
We've all heard the adage about the Archer vs. the Arrow. We've all heard of the guy with "inferior" equipment that outdoes the "state of the art." Most people have a soft-spot for the under-dog... heck, I still remember every shot of my first Sporting Clays tourney when I beat all the guys with the $15K Kreighoffs with my old Remington 1100.
We started to get into the conversation of the advancements that come from learning to shoot vs. equipment as well as the merits of certain equipment/action styles. This conversation involved many of the guys here that I would call "the shooters" as well as several fantastic, new members. It is one of those rare times when a civil, interesting dialogue developed and I'd like to keep it going.
To get us started, Frank Green was great enough to bring a great point to the table - (I'm paraphrasing) that if your equipment is beyond reproach; then you "know" that any issues that are present with the results on the target come from the shooter.
My personal thought is that if you can afford the best... then get the best. I've lived my life by that credo and there have been plenty of times when I COULDN'T afford the best. In relating my personal POV to the marksmanship scene; not everyone can afford a 40X, Annie, etc... does this mean that the "Archer" can't hone his skill? In my belief - YES they can. My thought is that every rifle has a level of capability. If your rifle shoots 2-3 MOA then that is just fine as long as it is consistently shooting that 2-3 MOA. You can still derive a level of deviation that would be a result of the shooter. Is this the optimum way? Of course not... but it CAN work.
In my humble experience, NOTHING can overcome the benefits that come from trigger time.
Obviously, if you've read the mentioned thread; this is just the tip of the iceberg of that discussion - but it has to start somewhere. So lets talk about it... and please... refrain from the "all day long" "in the right conditions" "if I do my part" comments! LOL!!
~ Rico