Sighting In

LOP matches what I would expect with hunting jacket on, using it for recoil mgmt. can sight in with t-shirt and shoot all day vs. the hockey puck hammering my shoulder trying to sight in.
 
LOP matches what I would expect with hunting jacket on, using it for recoil mgmt. can sight in with t-shirt and shoot all day vs. the hockey puck hammering my shoulder trying to sight in.

There is your answer. All it will take it catching you in the wrong place. And your brain will associate it with pain. Caught a M38 mosin in the collar bone, during a rapid fire. It was a while before shooting it again. It wasn't till I got a shoulder pad, that I was able to shoot it without my brain saying, this is going to hurt?

Its no different than people zeroing with lead sleds, and then go hunting where most of their shots are offhand, or leaning up against a tree.
 
There is your answer. All it will take it catching you in the wrong place. And your brain will associate it with pain. Caught a M38 mosin in the collar bone, during a rapid fire. It was a while before shooting it again. It wasn't till I got a shoulder pad, that I was able to shoot it without my brain saying, this is going to hurt?

Its no different than people zeroing with lead sleds, and then go hunting where most of their shots are offhand, or leaning up against a tree.

never seem to feel a shot when hunting, thick hunting jacket and usually one shot, I will test on and off to see how bad the POI changes
 
never seem to feel a shot when hunting, thick hunting jacket and usually one shot, I will test on and off to see how bad the POI changes

Agreed. No matter which gun/ammo I use, I've never felt the recoil when hunting. Don't know if I'm so focused on what I'm shooting, the adrenaline, etc. but I've never felt a thing. I hardly even hear my shots. It's almost just like background noise, whereas when I normally shoot without muffs, it's loud as hell.
 
I doubt that the slip-on pad will make any difference.

What could make a difference is the varying zero between being held in you hands and bouncing off a sand-bag.

That is the most important thing to consider. I was with a young fellow last week sighting in a new scope on his 300 Mag. Kept telling him to hold the forearm in his hand and rest his hand on the bag. Inch and a half groups either way, but three inches difference at 100 yards!

Ted
 
Slip-On Pad will not make a difference.
Once sighted in, you can remove, take a few shots to confirm, then ready to hunt.
 
I put a slip on pad on my wifes rifle when I shoot it. Theres no noticeable difference in point of impact if I shoot it with or without the pad. Its just more comfortable with it.

Your mileage may vary, of course
 
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