Definitely helpful. I’ve been dry firing some and have completely changed my shooting form. I used to shoot with a loose grip from the pocket but have moved to a firmer grip and shoot from the clavicle area. My left to right group has gotten better for sure. I figure the vertical stringing is coming from recoil management and will just take more practice. All the groups are under 1 moa do it’s not bad at all. But if I can get the form down I should be able to tighten it up. I’m planning to take a precision rifle course at some point. I also am going to try a rear squeeze bag. I’ve got to check with my range and make sure I can shoot prone. We’ve got 2 off site 1000 yard ranges we can for sure but they only have a 1000 yard berm.
Definitely helpful. I’ve been dry firing some and have completely changed my shooting form. I used to shoot with a loose grip from the pocket but have moved to a firmer grip and shoot from the clavicle area. My left to right group has gotten better for sure. I figure the vertical stringing is coming from recoil management and will just take more practice. All the groups are under 1 moa do it’s not bad at all. But if I can get the form down I should be able to tighten it up. I’m planning to take a precision rifle course at some point. I also am going to try a rear squeeze bag. I’ve got to check with my range and make sure I can shoot prone. We’ve got 2 off site 1000 yard ranges we can for sure but they only have a 1000 yard berm.
MOA is very good. Yeah, you r probably right on recoil management. Thats the pull into your shoulder. And not moving your shooting hand/finger after the shot and keeping your eyes open. I still have never seen any bullet trace though ive read where some have. I do see the white puff of the muzzle blast a nano second before recoil pulls or pushes the field of view away. Took me 3 years and a couple barrels to get the consistency I wanted. Goal being for that first cold bore shot within your average group zone or as they say a “hit”. You will enjoy 1k. Its a hoot to squeeze off a shot, get back on target to see the impact (on steel) then after about a second and a half ya can hear the “crack”. Or see dirt fly up on a miss, then all ya hear is a few choice words. Next is firing a follow up too hit while the plate is still moving. This is where a brake helps a bunch. Im fortunate to be able to practice on our own place here. Nearest range is a 90 minute drive, one way, for a 1k shot. Just started competitive but with the virus only went once last year, n thats at 600 yards at a range a bit closer to home. Shooting benchrest competition is much more demanding than hitting a steel target though. So far im not close to winning. But its still fun. Good luck, stick with it.