Went to the range and shoot my Stevens 200 in 30-06 yesterday. I shoot with a bench and front shooting bag at 100 yards as usual. The first 2 shots were ok but shots after that went worse and worse. After 10 rounds, I felt very dissapointed, and I tried couple more shots. And I got like 6" group! They are totally off! This is terrible. Ok, I admit that 30-06 is heavy for me. But everybody else over the forums can make a sub MOA, why can't I do it? Frustrated! I have tightened the scope and I did have a tight group (< 2") last weekend. Therefore I concluded it is me, not the gun. After googling a bit, I think what happened is that I developed an awful flinch. So far, I come out with a few ways to cure it:
1. Get a snap cap and practice shooting by dry fire.
2. Pull the trigger very very slowly
3. Add some weight to the stock and replace the god damn recoil pad (hard like a brick).
4. Purchase a set of nice front & rear shooting bag. (Shooting rest in the range makes one look stupid?)
5. Try 150g ammo for less recoil (I am using 180g currently)
6. Dump a lot of money on ammo and practice!
7. Get a small bore centerfire and learn to fight with recoil. (In 223 or 270? The only other guns I have are rimfires, which do not have recoil at all.)
What do you guys think? Any suggestions would be appreciated, thanks!
Perry
1. Get a snap cap and practice shooting by dry fire.
2. Pull the trigger very very slowly
3. Add some weight to the stock and replace the god damn recoil pad (hard like a brick).
4. Purchase a set of nice front & rear shooting bag. (Shooting rest in the range makes one look stupid?)
5. Try 150g ammo for less recoil (I am using 180g currently)
6. Dump a lot of money on ammo and practice!
7. Get a small bore centerfire and learn to fight with recoil. (In 223 or 270? The only other guns I have are rimfires, which do not have recoil at all.)
What do you guys think? Any suggestions would be appreciated, thanks!
Perry
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