I was surprised by how many hits that were made not by how many misses there were.What surprised me, was that folks were surprised.
Even some of the folks that "should know better" apparently don't.
The value of these videos is to bring some younger folks around to measured reality.
It was news to me that folks actually think they can have a high 600 yard hit percentage just because their rifle shoots a well known cartridge. I'm not sure when this idea caught on. I was raised before the internet and then plunged into the world of defense for so long that I guess I wasn't on the same page.
If you grew up before the internet, and you spent lots of time on a range with matches and in the pits, you already know what it takes on a known distance range. Even there, we will see shots from High Masters go into the white all the time. (A standard Mil target has a 6 MOA aiming black)
That means that even folks with good guns and ammo, who have already climbed the ranks to High Master (97%), commonly miss the black on their sighters. The rest of the folks are less likely to be in the 10 ring on their first shots.
So, long before the ideas floated that hit percentages in unknown distance, no wind flags, poor terrain for wind estimation, etc., could be the setting for high hit percentages... many of us were more "calibrated".
Now, we will have a generation of folks who have never been brought up shooting "The Wooden Guns" in Across the Course Service Rifle settings. They watch the PRS folks shoot at amazing levels with state of the art rifles, and they have no idea how hard those folks worked to achieve those levels of proficiency.
Unless they get off the couch and try an actual competition, where things get recorded, they will typically fall into the category of the folks who are surprised by the results of those hit percentages, or even worse, they think they can buy their way into high hit percentages without putting in the range time.
The other significant part of hunting in the field that’s impossible to incorporate into the challenge is the “buck fever” factor…. I shot a mule deer at 585yds with a quality factory rifle and hand loads & 49yrs old after years of practice and competition. If not for the discipline of competition and kinda getting better at handling the “buck fever” I don’t think I could’ve pulled it off. Could I do it every time… most definitely not. It’s an interesting challenge to say the least though!What surprised me, was that folks were surprised.
Even some of the folks that "should know better" apparently don't.
The value of these videos is to bring some younger folks around to measured reality.
It was news to me that folks actually think they can have a high 600 yard hit percentage just because their rifle shoots a well known cartridge. I'm not sure when this idea caught on. I was raised before the internet and then plunged into the world of defense for so long that I guess I wasn't on the same page.
If you grew up before the internet, and you spent lots of time on a range with matches and in the pits, you already know what it takes on a known distance range. Even there, we will see shots from High Masters go into the white all the time. (A standard Mil target has a 6 MOA aiming black)
That means that even folks with good guns and ammo, who have already climbed the ranks to High Master (97%), commonly miss the black on their sighters. The rest of the folks are less likely to be in the 10 ring on their first shots.
So, long before the ideas floated that hit percentages in unknown distance, no wind flags, poor terrain for wind estimation, etc., could be the setting for high hit percentages... many of us were more "calibrated".
Now, we will have a generation of folks who have never been brought up shooting "The Wooden Guns" in Across the Course Service Rifle settings. They watch the PRS folks shoot at amazing levels with state of the art rifles, and they have no idea how hard those folks worked to achieve those levels of proficiency.
Unless they get off the couch and try an actual competition, where things get recorded, they will typically fall into the category of the folks who are surprised by the results of those hit percentages, or even worse, they think they can buy their way into high hit percentages without putting in the range time.
excellent. wow