Batesville Shooter
  • Blog
  • Welcome
  • About
Posted on October 28, 2016 by admin Posted in Uncategorized |

Four Tips for Better Accuracy

Consistency is a big factor when attempting to shoot tight groups at the rifle range. This goes for the loads you’re putting in your rifle, the conditions at the range, and your shooting technique. And apply these four techniques to get the most of your rifle:
1. Rest Easy
When you’re shooting from the bench, you don’t want your front rest and rear sandbag to move at all. You want the gun to slide over them, not push them around under recoil. You can get your rear bag to stick to the bench by placing a piece of rubber carpet mat between the bag and the bench, or if your rear bag is made of leather, by wetting the bottom of the bag.
Swivel studs on a gunstock will cause the bags to jump around, so either position the bags away from them or unscrew them from the stock while you’re shooting.
To help the rifle slide on the bag, use this benchrest shooter’s trick: Place a used dryer sheet between the bag and the stock.
2. Use a Light Touch
With a rifle that weighs more than 13 pounds and rides the bags well, you can let it free recoil—meaning you don’t touch the stock at all—when shooting groups. But with any regular sporting rifle, you’re going to need to grip it.
When I shoot a hunting rifle that’s between 9 and 10 pounds with a scope, I might just grip it with my trigger hand and barely rest it in my shoulder. With a lighter gun, you’ll need to grip the forend as well to keep it from jumping all over the place.
Use the least amount of contact you can while still feeling the rifle is stable under recoil.
3. Foul Out
After cleaning a rifle, you should fire a fouling shot or two before shooting for groups. Also, when shooting a semiauto, the first round that you manually chamber should be shot off to the side of the target, because it won’t seat in the chamber the same way as subsequent rounds that are chambered automatically.
4. Kill the Flier
The classic “four-and-one”—a tight group with a flier on the fourth or fifth shot—happens when you get excited and lose focus. It’s at this point that you try to wish the final shot into an existing hole and mess it up. Often you find that you’ve put extra shoulder pressure on the stock, which usually sends the shot low.
To cure this, reset yourself on the bench. Stand up, turn in a circle, and get back behind the gun. Or send a shot deliberately off to the side, then go back to shooting the group.

« Ruger LCR 22 Magnum with Crimson Trace Laser Grips
New Henry Long Ranger »

Leave a comment Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Archives

Login Here

  • Register
  • Log in

Sign-up Instructions

The above register button will ask for your Email address & for you to select a password. When you register you will receive notifications for new posts and you will be able to post comments.

Recent Comments

  • admin on Smith and Wesson 357 Magnum Model 19
  • mattcttc2 on Website Improvements
  • GM on Colt 1911 Gold Cup National Match
  • tedsned on Barrett Rec7 With Hawke 4X16X50 Scope
  • Michelle on Blog
© Batesville Shooter
Top of the page
  • Blog
  • Welcome
  • About