scoping
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scoping
What do you people regard as a practical scoping routine of your target? The pros and cons of scoping are abvious to everybody I'm sure but given the ying and yang of scoping too much and therefore concentrating on target results and scoping never in the attempt to train the mind to only mind the foresight and trigger, there has to be an in between; cadence if you like. And maybe that applies differently to air and to free......
For free pistol I:
- Scope every shot in the 15 minutes preparation and sighting
- During the match, I scope every two to three shots, or if one shot "felt bad"
- Scope every time before changing the target (to confirm the number of shots) and before shoting a new target, to confirm that it has no holes.
For air pistol I:
- Pull the target every time for the first three to four shots, and then every two to three shots during the 15 minutes preparation and sighting
- In a match I only pull the targets for changing (we usually do two shots per card).
Hope this helps
- Scope every shot in the 15 minutes preparation and sighting
- During the match, I scope every two to three shots, or if one shot "felt bad"
- Scope every time before changing the target (to confirm the number of shots) and before shoting a new target, to confirm that it has no holes.
For air pistol I:
- Pull the target every time for the first three to four shots, and then every two to three shots during the 15 minutes preparation and sighting
- In a match I only pull the targets for changing (we usually do two shots per card).
Hope this helps
You should really scope every shot. Certainly until you're really confident in your ability and your shot calling. The point of scoping is to confirm your shots went where you expected and to re-affirm the good shots (i.e. a good technical results in a good outcome, i.e a 10) . You can back off if you want and just concentrate on perfect shot execution, but you still need to scope every few shots, just to confirm all is as expected, and/or if you need a small tweak of the sights.
Rob.
Rob.
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Re: scoping
Started rifle shooting in 1976, pistol in 1982, but still a rookie I guess. If I see a shot that did not go where I thought. I want to fix the problem in my head before I bleed out a couple more 8's that I thought were centered.rickard9 wrote:Ahha, a rookie eh? Been there, done that
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I normally do not scope every shot. Once it is gone you can not change it. You should not need to scope every shot.
Last night I was shooting my 45 at 50yds and since I was shooting a new load I wanted to make sure my shots were going were I expected them to. So I was shooting along and looking after every shot. after 4 I had 3 x's and 1 10. Now the pressure started to build.....6. Bummer. My normal process is to shoot the first shot and look and then look after 5 then I check again after 7-8. Spending most of my time trying to focus on shooting 10s and what I need to do not what I have done. There is time to look at the target when you score.
Of course if I did look at every shot then maybe I could shoot the same scores as John does.
Last night I was shooting my 45 at 50yds and since I was shooting a new load I wanted to make sure my shots were going were I expected them to. So I was shooting along and looking after every shot. after 4 I had 3 x's and 1 10. Now the pressure started to build.....6. Bummer. My normal process is to shoot the first shot and look and then look after 5 then I check again after 7-8. Spending most of my time trying to focus on shooting 10s and what I need to do not what I have done. There is time to look at the target when you score.
Of course if I did look at every shot then maybe I could shoot the same scores as John does.
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It's not about seeing what's been and gone (and what you can longer affect), as David says it's about positive affirmation that you shot process resulted in a good shot that you called correctly. You reinforce the positive scoping the good shots, and learn from your errors with the poor or incorrectly called shots.David Levene wrote:You shouldn't need to scope to see where the shot has gone. You should be scoping to confirm that it went where you called it.Chris wrote:I normally do not scope every shot. Once it is gone you can not change it. You should not need to scope every shot..
Rob.
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The other (extremely important) reason is, when shooting on electronic targets, you must challenge a zero immediately (6.15.4.2.1), before firing the next shot.David Levene wrote:You shouldn't need to scope to see where the shot has gone. You should be scoping to confirm that it went where you called it.Chris wrote:I normally do not scope every shot. Once it is gone you can not change it. You should not need to scope every shot..
If not, you own it.
So if you ever plan on shooting on EST any time, anywhere, you simply must have it in your shot plan that you verify every shot.
- john bickar
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Not to pick on you, Chris (OK, maybe a little ;), but this is the argument that I most commonly hear against scoping every shot.Chris wrote:So I was shooting along and looking after every shot. after 4 I had 3 x's and 1 10. Now the pressure started to build.....6. Bummer.
Often people will avoid scoping every shot as a crutch against the internal "pressure" that they feel as a "good" target starts to develop.
In doing so, they are tacitly acknowledging a weakness in their mental game plan, and stubbornly refusing to take any steps to overcome it.
Conversely, the way to learn how to shoot 100s is to put yourself in the position of having 9 10s on a target as often as possible.
Last edited by john bickar on Mon Apr 13, 2015 11:01 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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John, can't thank you enough for those few sentences that change my shooting life.
For me in AP, in practice I do not scope. If I follow thru correctly, know that everything is line up right, a quick peek far away will be enough. However if I know something is not quite right, whether my hand shake, or my breathing is wrong, then after a couple more shots I will stop and examine if indeed my suspicious is correct or not. Follow through is extremely important, without which I cannot identify the shots that I know are wrong.
I am far from being a good shooter, just beginning to reach a 5:1 ratio of black vs white. So when I count I count the shots that did not land in black. I think when I get better, or at least hit my limit then I will examine more often.
If FP since it is far away, I scope every single shot.
Just my two pellets from a first year rookie.
For me in AP, in practice I do not scope. If I follow thru correctly, know that everything is line up right, a quick peek far away will be enough. However if I know something is not quite right, whether my hand shake, or my breathing is wrong, then after a couple more shots I will stop and examine if indeed my suspicious is correct or not. Follow through is extremely important, without which I cannot identify the shots that I know are wrong.
I am far from being a good shooter, just beginning to reach a 5:1 ratio of black vs white. So when I count I count the shots that did not land in black. I think when I get better, or at least hit my limit then I will examine more often.
If FP since it is far away, I scope every single shot.
Just my two pellets from a first year rookie.