I would be dubious about paying someone. It's easy to talk the talk and take your money without giving a shit about you or your safety.
Where are you based? I'm no F class champ but could tell you what I do know. I'm sure plenty of other forum members.
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She loves the free fresh wind in her hair; Life without care. She's broke but it's oke; that's why the lady is a tramp.
Rule 4: Identify your target beyond all doubt
I see you might be Dorkland - contact Kerry at TheBloke.nz and tell him I sent you, he might be able to help you out or if not will put you in contacted with a reputable shooter who can.
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She loves the free fresh wind in her hair; Life without care. She's broke but it's oke; that's why the lady is a tramp.
Rule 4: Identify your target beyond all doubt
Scroll down this page to "Toby Goodley Memorial Shoot"
Post in there of your intentions to attend the shoot and your location, someone will have a space in a vehicle to get you to and from the shoot, it will be an experience you will never forget, with people that will never let you forget
You will learn valuable amounts about shooting and have a lot of fun in the process.
Make yourself known to one of the Range Officers on the day and you will be looked after
Andrew
A big fast bullet beats a little fast bullet every time
As the sound of the gun wears down your hearing you'll flinch less and less. Even when the wife talks.
Anyone know of someone in the chch area that could give a newbie a few tips? Have taught myself how to hunt and shoot and sure I've picked up a few bad habits
Hi TimK,
I'm a fellow new guy and in my search I found a couple of podcasts that you might find useful (I certainly did).
The guys interview former special operations sniper, Ryan Cleckner. He's been a long time trainer of snipers, and speaks plainly with some good advice. They cover a lot of topics including developing good shooting technique; rifle setup; ballistics and lots of other good stuff. I keep listening to these interviews and getting stuff out of it each time.
One thing Ryan repeatedly talks about is the importance of dry firing. From his advice and people on this thread I think it'd be worth investing in some snap caps so you don't do any damage to the gun from dry firing.
Building a backcountry rifle -Shoot like a sniper Part1
Building a backcountry rifle -Shoot like a sniper Part2
Last edited by samusugiru; 18-07-2017 at 09:57 AM. Reason: Formatting
From your six shots , Four of them make a decent group and 2 shots ( X2 ) are quite good .
You are not flinching at all , what you are doing is not be consistent with your technique and are probably trying to "force " things ( the two wild shots ) i.e not using your natural point of aiming .
You just need to settle down , more practice , and then work from there .
i went from a .22 to a .270 and blasted my way through a heap of ammo at nothing in particular... developed a good flinch that still gets me now and then! it really sucks. be mindful of whats happening when you pull the trigger and ask someone to load the mag with a snap cap randomly inserted. you will notice your flinch when you pull the trigger on the snap cap (you wont know which round is a snap cap until you use it) A mate did this trick on me and it really shows how bad the flinch is.
Also tag along to a club meeting (look up shooting clubs) try looking up the range calendar for the nzda range at weir road. there are all sorts of shoots there that will help.
Use enough gun
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