Rifle Myths and Mysteries

Theres a nice black bear thats alive because of a 1" tree i didnt see as i had the crosshairs on his shoulder. 400gr bullet from a 458wm. Got the branch good though. Bullet ended up low and behind the bear
 
I once shot an elk that was standing broadside behind a thin screen of brush. She was (measured) 46 feet away. Was aiming at her chest. Hit her in the butt. My 180 gr. Norma Oryx .30-06 bullet ( a VERY good bullet) hit three twigs smaller than the size of pencils along the way. Good thing I got another aimed shot in, quick and in the clear. Don't shoot through brush if you can help it. I should have aimed for the neck or brain under the circumstances. So close even I would not have missed!
 
At a Practical Rifle match when the AR15 was NOT restrictred, we had a fun "Jungle Trail" that ran maybe 150 yds. Don't recall the numbers of targets. No target more than 25 yds away. The rest of the match was on paper on the usual range, a quasi-military run down.

IPSC targets were placed behind trees to partially screen them and partially hidden by shrubbery. There were two categories - bolt action and semi-auto, no restriction on calibres in either.

When scoring an AR15 shooter, he was astounded to learn that his double taps had not penetrated the shrubbery to hit the targets more than once, the bullets deflected by the twigs. Other shots were deflected off trees and missed the targets.

On the other hand, the guys with the 'retro battle rifles' (Springfields, Lee-Enfields, Mausers, Moisin Nagants, Garands, M1A's) shot thru' green trees 4"-6" and hit the targets behind them! Brush and shrubbery was not an issue.

The match winner on a couple of occasions was a US school teacher from Wenatchee, his rifle a scoped Remington 700 in .25-'06. He also kicked our butts in pistol shooting with his matched pair of King's Custom Gunworks .45 Commanders.

About this time, there was an article in "American Rifleman" from a US Army Captain who reported an incident where the AR15 failed to do the job. His people were in reserve, watching a firefight from a vantage point. A Viet mortar crew set up at 200 yds not knowing that they were under observation.

He called up a rifleman to engage them. The soldier emptied a 20 rd magazine without hitting anyone and the mortar crew did not know they were under fire! They were screened by jungle shrubbery. He then called up his M60 gunner and indicated the target to him. The gunner rapped off single rds, killing all members of the crew.

Lesson learned - the 5.56mm was not the ideal weapon for the purpose.
 
Give a Facebook page called NB hunters a read; I can barely breathe sometimes from the myths grown men still choose to believe after all we know today when it comes to firearms and ballistics.
I had a gentleman tell me to never shoot old (as in literally old not corroded) brass ammo because brass is bad for growing over time. Then another gentleman chimes in and says he throws out more ammo do to old age rather than risk firing it.
What is old age you may ask? According to those two 3-5 years.

Where do you even start to correct that logic?

I quit following most nb hunting related fb pages for that very reason. too many BS opinions about everything from firearms to laws / regulations being passed off fact by people who claim to know.
 
Well, I stand corrected. Although it seems to me you are arguing is that it is possible that the random Yaw and Pitch gyrations of an unstabilized bullet can, by chance, make it wander back into the line of sight at some point in it's inaccurate and unrepeatable flight. Unstable bullets are not accurate bullets at any range, and a 2" group at 100 will never make a smaller group at long range except by weird fluke. A 2 minute of angle load may actually be able to shoot 1.5 minutes of angle at 300 yards, but a 2MOA group at 100 is about 2". A 1.5 minute of angle group at 300 yards is over 4 inches. The actual group size will not shrink as you get farther from the barrel.

Why don't you try to get inform on this subject by yourself ? Not trying to be rude here just not the teacher kind of guy.

This is just science man !
 
Prove it !

Litz has $50 grand for anyone who can shoot a group that gets tighter at distance. It can't happen. It's physically impossible. The A in moa stands for angle. That's not how angles work. I don't need to prove it. Physics states it can't happen. YOU can make some big money to prove otherwise, but I'll tell you now, you can't.
 
This is what you're insinuating...
http s ://forum.snipershide.com/threads/how-can-a-rifle-shoot-poorly-at-100-but-well-at-1000.6986710/post-8373760
Someone watched Wanted a bit too much. There is no bending bullets.
 
Why don't you try to get inform on this subject by yourself ? Not trying to be rude here just not the teacher kind of guy.

This is just science man !

So, in a thread about myths and mysteries, you are becoming a perfect example of how little physics most shooters know, and so they believe myths about shooting.

How do you feel about shooting into space?
 
Give a Facebook page called NB hunters a read; I can barely breathe sometimes from the myths grown men still choose to believe after all we know today when it comes to firearms and ballistics.
I had a gentleman tell me to never shoot old (as in literally old not corroded) brass ammo because brass is bad for growing over time. Then another gentleman chimes in and says he throws out more ammo do to old age rather than risk firing it.
What is old age you may ask? According to those two 3-5 years.

Where do you even start to correct that logic?

I'd start by standing near their garbage can when they're disposing of the ammo.
Kristian
 
That if you shoot a 6.5 Creedmoor .............................................

About 6 months ago, there was a guy either here or the other forum that was trying to tell us that the 6.5 CM was a perfect 1000 yard deer rifle; and it was better than everything else, for everything else.
 
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