Nearly every time I come home from a trip to the gun range, I bring back a story in my mind that I keep thinking about. For a while. Last weekend, it was the guy who brought a monster cartridge rifle up to the bench a couple stalls down from me. Here I have to interject that we are now in hunter's sight-in season. Where some people come around once a year to zero their rifles. Which is the only shooting they do, outside of limited shots they might take in the field while hunting. Accordingly, these shooters form the basis for some of the stories.
The bolt rifle this guy brought up to his bench, I'm not sure what it was. I had stuff to do and I didn't want to get into conversation. It was very conventional, wood stock, was fairly heavily proportioned. It looked brand new. It appeared to have one of those muzzle devices like a Winchester BOSS barrel tuner on it. When he finally took a shot, the gun went off with a roar. Like a Remington 300 Ultra Mag, but if I'm not mistaken, I seem to recall seeing a belt on the head of the case. Maybe not. But the cartridges where biggies.
The guy started out on the 100 yard range where I was. Later, I saw him with the same rifle down in the 50 yard lanes. The RSO was helping him get it on paper. But I thought it was funny, the shooter was fooling around with the BOSS barrel tuner. Which is for tuning your groups AFTER you get on paper. Not much help in obtaining basic zero, I'd think. While trying and failing on the 100 range, who knows how far off the guy got with his scope, turning knobs.
At our range, they have one of those kits with a laser pointer for helping people get sights or optics in a basic zero. I've never used it, I'm able to do it without such help. First thing I do as at home. I have a permanent target set up so I can do an eyeball-down-the-bore basic zero. When I've got that done, then the gun goes to the range for finer adjustments. Of course, the rifle design has to be such that you can actually look down the bore.
When I go to the range where I'm a life member, if I'm shooting over open sights on the 100 yard range, I'm one of only a few. Mostly scopes are seen. Depending on the target design (discussed in another thread) determines how well I'll do. Yet when I go down to the 50 yard range, mostly I see scoped rifles there as well. Like a fellow member, who shoots 50 yards with a scoped .45-70 Ruger No. 1.
There might be another conversation about the need for a Remington 300 Ultra Mag. Or whatever it was. Yeah, yeah, I know, elk at 1,200 yards.
The bolt rifle this guy brought up to his bench, I'm not sure what it was. I had stuff to do and I didn't want to get into conversation. It was very conventional, wood stock, was fairly heavily proportioned. It looked brand new. It appeared to have one of those muzzle devices like a Winchester BOSS barrel tuner on it. When he finally took a shot, the gun went off with a roar. Like a Remington 300 Ultra Mag, but if I'm not mistaken, I seem to recall seeing a belt on the head of the case. Maybe not. But the cartridges where biggies.
The guy started out on the 100 yard range where I was. Later, I saw him with the same rifle down in the 50 yard lanes. The RSO was helping him get it on paper. But I thought it was funny, the shooter was fooling around with the BOSS barrel tuner. Which is for tuning your groups AFTER you get on paper. Not much help in obtaining basic zero, I'd think. While trying and failing on the 100 range, who knows how far off the guy got with his scope, turning knobs.
At our range, they have one of those kits with a laser pointer for helping people get sights or optics in a basic zero. I've never used it, I'm able to do it without such help. First thing I do as at home. I have a permanent target set up so I can do an eyeball-down-the-bore basic zero. When I've got that done, then the gun goes to the range for finer adjustments. Of course, the rifle design has to be such that you can actually look down the bore.
When I go to the range where I'm a life member, if I'm shooting over open sights on the 100 yard range, I'm one of only a few. Mostly scopes are seen. Depending on the target design (discussed in another thread) determines how well I'll do. Yet when I go down to the 50 yard range, mostly I see scoped rifles there as well. Like a fellow member, who shoots 50 yards with a scoped .45-70 Ruger No. 1.
There might be another conversation about the need for a Remington 300 Ultra Mag. Or whatever it was. Yeah, yeah, I know, elk at 1,200 yards.