This match is like some bills in congress, you don't know what's in it until you sign up.
This match is like some bills in congress, you don't know what's in it until you sign up.
Keep Calm and Carry.
Good luck sailor.
You know I like my coffee sweet in the morning
and I'm crazy about my tea at night
I'm back. I'll be collecting my thoughts and providing a run down of what I 'should' have done to prepare for this match.
22 stages, 391 points available. It was so difficult that the winner scored an impressive 48%.
I scored a whopping 9%, which was not first place but it was also not last place. I learned a metric crap-ton, and I walked out with some cool swag, both from the prize table and from other shooters talking to me after the match.
To be continued.....
Just doing what I can to stay on this side of the dirt.
As long as you shot the helicopter stage your a winner. Good work Belly!![]()
If your post count is higher than your round count, you are a troll.
Sounds like it was a fun match!
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We specialize in armored steel targetry systems for practical and long range shooting.
Part 1
Let's talk about mindset. In any course/competition/etc., it's important to go into it with a particular goal in mind. in the case of this match, although it was a huge national level match, I didn't intend on winning. My goals were few, reasonable, and easily achievable.
1) keep all my fingers and toes while not causing anyone else to lose their fingers/toes/life.
2) do not DQ due to a safety violation.
3) observe others and find those lessons that I need to learn.
4) be a good competitor, as strong of a competitor as I can, but don't let the 'Alpha' be the part that takes over. (I saw a couple competitors almost lose their minds when they missed a target, one in particular comes to mind. He is a good shooter. he placed pretty well, IIRC. However, more people talked about his temper tantrums after the stages than they did his pretty good shooting. He was 'that guy'.)
5) have fun, meet people, talk to folks, socialize, share notes, etc.
Here's a couple of metrics from the shooting:
I scored 36 hits out of a total 391 possible. I had an overall hit factor of just over 9%. This, to me, isn't the story that really tells the tale. I'm more interested in the following metric: Out of 109 shots fired, I hit 36 times. That means that I had a hit factor of just a shade over 33%. Some will say that that's just me trying to make sense of my crappy shooting. Well, here's my response to that. Yes it is, with caveat.
The caveat is that I refuse to pull the trigger just to hear the gun go boom. I won't pull the trigger unless I'm set up in my position and I feel that I've got a reasonably good chance of scoring a hit. This is evidenced by the fact that I didn't shoot at every target and that my hit percentages were different, overall points vs. shots taken.
Just doing what I can to stay on this side of the dirt.
PART 2: The Rifle System
I used an LMT MWS with the (LMT made) .260 Remington barrel in 20" length. It has a 1/9 twist. I made the following changes:
Carbine length to Rifle length stock: SOPMOD to Magpul PRS.
Stock spring to a Tubbs AR-10 Spring. http://www.laruetactical.com/tubbs-b...buffer-springs
factory charging handle to a Tac-Ops 1 charging handle. https://www.riflesonly.com/pro-shop/...-for-ar10.html
I used a LaRue PSR mount with 20MOA built in. http://www.laruetactical.com/larue-t...scope-mount-qd
I used a Bushnell Elite Tactical 6-24x50 with G2DMR reticle. http://www.bushnell.com/tactical/rif...x-50mm-mil-dot
I used a TAB Gear sling. https://www.riflesonly.com/pro-shop/...ear-sling.html
I used an Atlas Bipod. https://www.riflesonly.com/pro-shop/...las-bipod.html
I used a Red TAC rear bag. http://www.milehighshooting.com/red-...inal-bean-bag/
i used a WieBad Tac Pac. This is now an indispensable piece of kit, without a doubt. https://www.riflesonly.com/pro-shop/...d-tac-pac.html
I used a stock birdcage muzzle device. I wished I had a recoil-controlling brake or a suppressor to help calm things down.
I loaded my own ammo using LC12LR once fired cases, Rem 9 1/2 primers, 41.0 gr of H4350 powder, and 123 gr Lapua Scenar bullets. This led to a pretty slow average speed of 2710fps. It grouped very well at 100 yards and also performed well at 250 yards, which was the farthest I was able to get positive grouping information.
I'll be honest and say that the only upgrade that I wished I would have made was the trigger. The stock 2-stage from LMT is definitely meant for a combat scenario when your target is something that looks like a human. It is just too firm for a competition that requires 1-2MOA accuracy all day long.
Out of 130 competitors, I was one of only about 15 or so that was using a semi-auto gun. Everyone else was using special built bolt action guns that had barrels much heavier than mine. This was evident during stages requiring longer strings of fire.
Last edited by TheBelly; 02-25-2014 at 21:27.
Just doing what I can to stay on this side of the dirt.
Regardless of where you finished, you came away from the competition with valuable experience gained and lessons learned that can improve your performance later on down the road. That in its self is worth the cost and time invested.
Do you ever feel that you were limited by your stock? I don't know how the shooting positions were, but myself and Not_A_Llama made the decision to run carbine stocks for Rocky Mountain Steel Quest.
Keep Calm and Carry.