Buttplate contacts right pectoral muscle
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Buttplate contacts right pectoral muscle
I've a problem when shooting standing, the buttplate contacts the right pectoral muscle.
This contact pushes the buttplate up and out from my arm and therefore the buttplate only have contact with the arm on the lower part of the buttplate.
I have the buttplate in the "hole" between the deltoid muscle and the biceps.
The solution that I can think of is to raise my arm more, now I have it completely relaxed.
Any thought about this?
This contact pushes the buttplate up and out from my arm and therefore the buttplate only have contact with the arm on the lower part of the buttplate.
I have the buttplate in the "hole" between the deltoid muscle and the biceps.
The solution that I can think of is to raise my arm more, now I have it completely relaxed.
Any thought about this?
For the first part, the picture you show is a shooter not on aim, rather preparing for the shot, his arm may or may not remain in the same position.Johan_85 wrote:You see alot of shooters that have a high trigger arm. For me that seems impossible without using muscles to hold it up.
What other solutions is there to avoid contact with the right pectoral muscle? Is it just me that have my bodyparts in such a way so it becomes a problem?
Solutions to the butt touching the pecs are more difficult without seeing you in position. You can try changing your position slightly and/or moving the buttplate itself (within the confines of the rules you shoot under).
Rob.
Moving the buttplate in height isn't possible because then I won't come down on target and the rifle will be to low so I need to reach down. I can't see how that could help this problem either.
Shortening the stock is possible and if I shorten I don't need to reach forward as much and therefore it creates a bigger "hole" between my right arm and right pec. The problem with that is that the pressure on the buttplate gets to low and the recoil absorbtion gets bad. The rifle also starts to get drawn out of the shoulder for some reason.
I need to think about this but I won't change something now because it's competition time in one and a half week.
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I had/have a problem similar to this, tho its caused by different reasons.
I'm short and heavy and I shoot with my stance more open, but my rifle (fwb700 with mec butt plate) comes into contact with my chest at the point where the pec meets the shoulder.
In your case you are tall and lean and shoot with your body almost square to the target this naturally brings the rifle close to the chest.
My setup on the back end of rifle used to be the same as yours. I removed the black spacer you have between carrier and mec plate, this allowed me to mount the mec plate higher to avoid my chest but still allowed me to drop the adjustable levers back down to where they fitted into my arm
It's also then possible to offset the plate slightly to give more clearance.
Iv still a long way to go as my jacket was customised for shooting prone and this causes problems with fit when standing/kneeling.
I'm short and heavy and I shoot with my stance more open, but my rifle (fwb700 with mec butt plate) comes into contact with my chest at the point where the pec meets the shoulder.
In your case you are tall and lean and shoot with your body almost square to the target this naturally brings the rifle close to the chest.
My setup on the back end of rifle used to be the same as yours. I removed the black spacer you have between carrier and mec plate, this allowed me to mount the mec plate higher to avoid my chest but still allowed me to drop the adjustable levers back down to where they fitted into my arm
It's also then possible to offset the plate slightly to give more clearance.
Iv still a long way to go as my jacket was customised for shooting prone and this causes problems with fit when standing/kneeling.
Sometimes other people must tell you what is obvious. As I read what you wrote Matt I did exactly what remmy223 wrote he did. I moved the black spacer that is a weight and put it under the cheekpiece, moved the carrier up and positioned the buttplate in the same height as before.
It felt better without a jacket, I'm going to test this at my upcoming training session.
Is it something else that looks "wrong" in the position?
It felt better without a jacket, I'm going to test this at my upcoming training session.
Is it something else that looks "wrong" in the position?
Okay, do you mean that my head reaches long forward or that I tilt it forward from the skullbase?muldoon9 wrote:I myself think you have the head tilted forward a wee too much.
The rest of the stance looks very stable.
M
In Missoura
One problem in this is that I can't put the diopter further forward because the lid over the "chamber" hit the diopter when loading. I can't mount anymore raisers because it is at maximum height under ISSF rules. Is there any other solution and what will I benefit from it when I don't tilt my head as much?
I think he means your head should be more upright. Currently it's tilted forwards such that you're almost looking through the bottom of your eyebrow. To correct that you'd need to straiighten up the head and drop the buttplate down to raise the rifle (as you say you can't add any more raisers). You may also need to and benefit from shortening the butt slightly to pull it back such that you don't feel the need to lean forward into the sights. As a side effect that will also pull in the COG which should give increased stability.Johan_85 wrote:Okay, do you mean that my head reaches long forward or that I tilt it forward from the skullbase?muldoon9 wrote:I myself think you have the head tilted forward a wee too much.
The rest of the stance looks very stable.
M
In Missoura
One problem in this is that I can't put the diopter further forward because the lid over the "chamber" hit the diopter when loading. I can't mount anymore raisers because it is at maximum height under ISSF rules. Is there any other solution and what will I benefit from it when I don't tilt my head as much?
Rob.
I can't drop the buttplate anymore because then it is too low and does not comply with ISSF rules.RobStubbs wrote:I think he means your head should be more upright. Currently it's tilted forwards such that you're almost looking through the bottom of your eyebrow. To correct that you'd need to straiighten up the head and drop the buttplate down to raise the rifle (as you say you can't add any more raisers). You may also need to and benefit from shortening the butt slightly to pull it back such that you don't feel the need to lean forward into the sights. As a side effect that will also pull in the COG which should give increased stability.
Rob.
I don't know if I feel the need to lean forward into the sights but I have a pretty long neck and when I want to look through the sights the neck must come forward to be able to reach down to the cheekpiece.
If I shorten the butt I don't get a good contact with the buttplate.
Maybe I need to adjust buttlength and the height of the buttplate now because it probably have changed how the contact is made with the upper arm when it's less contact with the pectoral muscle. This is minor adjustments measured in millimeters.
I can't raise the sights anymore because then it goes outside the maximum height when shooting under ISSF rules.muldoon9 wrote:yes what Rob Stubs said.
I would investigate raisng the cheek, piece and the sights.
I myself. I too have a long neck and shoot with a lot of cant ......... In addition to the high sights and elevated cheekpiece.
M-