In shotgun and pistol shooting no one would expect a gun sighted-in by another person to be even close for a different shooter.
In trapshooting with shotguns having adjustable combs, butt plates, and ribs the "sighting-in" that produces a 100 Straight for one shooter may produce "D" class scores for another equally skilled trapshooter. Some shooters float the clay target and use a very high pattern -- sort of a six o'clock hold -- whereas others shoot a very flat version -- an X-ring hold. They're not "aiming" per se, but the fit of the gun is made different for the different point of impacts.
Is it different for competition rifle shooters ?
If a 1,000 yard benchrest rifle shooter is able to put 10 shots in the 10-ring and there is no change in the wind conditions, should another equally skilled shooter still be at least on paper with the same rifle, ammo, and benchrest setup at a 1,000 yards ?
In trapshooting with shotguns having adjustable combs, butt plates, and ribs the "sighting-in" that produces a 100 Straight for one shooter may produce "D" class scores for another equally skilled trapshooter. Some shooters float the clay target and use a very high pattern -- sort of a six o'clock hold -- whereas others shoot a very flat version -- an X-ring hold. They're not "aiming" per se, but the fit of the gun is made different for the different point of impacts.
Is it different for competition rifle shooters ?
If a 1,000 yard benchrest rifle shooter is able to put 10 shots in the 10-ring and there is no change in the wind conditions, should another equally skilled shooter still be at least on paper with the same rifle, ammo, and benchrest setup at a 1,000 yards ?
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