Thanks guy's for your participation in this thread, it appears that there's more of us here than I (perhaps we) thought, interesting that many of us have relatively low post counts, wonder why? Mabey we're a little less talk-more shoot, which is not a bad thing![]()
The answer here is spending more time on the range, and more time in the sights. No shortcuts to that part.
Take a look at Lanny Bassham's collected works on Mental Management for shooting sports, and I promise you, that'll be the single most cost effective equipment purchase you'll ever make.
I shoot on average once a day for the last 14 months and I'm not anywhere near as good as I think I should be.
Send a link please Kevin./QUOTE]
https://www.amazon.com/dp/1934324264/?tag=accuratescom-20
Good book
another excellent resource that deals more with the mechanics of position (if you can find it, out of print)
https://www.amazon.com/dp/3000094784/?tag=accuratescom-20
Two years ago, I was shooting a long range match in Mn. I was scoring for a gentleman that was fairly new. After he finished his string, he said "no matter how much that I practice, I don't seem to be getting any better." I looked at his rifle, then pointed out an obvious mistake that he had. Then I told him, "if you shoot on your own, and keep practicing mistakes you will have a hard time getting better." I then suggested shooting more matches and talking with other shooters, he should get many helpful tips. Then you might have better things to practice.I'm proving this is not the whole answer.
I shoot on average once a day for the last 14 months and I'm not anywhere near as good as I think I should be.
Either I'm doing the same things wrong many, many times or I have no talent or both.
Two years ago, I was shooting a long range match in Mn. I was scoring for a gentleman that was fairly new. After he finished his string, he said "no matter how much that I practice, I don't seem to be getting any better." I looked at his rifle, then pointed out an obvious mistake that he had. Then I told him, "if you shoot on your own, and keep practicing mistakes you will have a hard time getting better." I then suggested shooting more matches and talking with other shooters, he should get many helpful tips. Then you might have better things to practice.
That’s a great point, Keith. Nothing wrong with shooting on your own for practice, but practicing in a vacuum can sometimes hurt more than help. Also, you can’t really simulate the nerves, pressure etc of a match in practice.
I'll go ahead and be "that guy" and say it flat out; it's because we have a lot of shooters who'd rather buy their scores than earn them. Take a look at a guy like Konrad Powers, who does stupidly simple reloading practices, spends very little time dealing with his equipment (either on the reloading bench or his rifles) and yet consistently shows up at the top of any match he attends. He works on himself, his game and what he can do to get every last bit of performance out of himself. The rifles will shoot, the ammo will shoot, but getting the shooter to shoot, that's the hard part. We have far too many (new) competitors who assume that they can beat Brandon Greene, Sherri Gallagher, Norm Houle or Kent Reeves by spending more on a better priming tool, a better case neck turner, or annealing cases with the latest annealer on the market.
The answer here is spending more time on the range, and more time in the sights. No shortcuts to that part.