Tac Rifle at TMSA - range report & newb mistakes NOW WIT PICS!

the_klenzer

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Hello gents! Thought I'd post a little blurb about my first tactical rifle competition day. I've been black rifles from a bench for a couple years so it was about damn time to get out there and use one in motion.

First, thanks to Dave for running it, great day, no hitches. To Rob for captaining Team Goat and from keeping me from shooting the wood barricade as well as an improptu "how to fix a double feed while the timer is running" lesson. Jon for inviting me out. And thanks to the other volunteers for setting it all up.

Second, can't post pics until I photoshop the "suck" out of the ones with me in them and get permission from others in the photos - give me a day or so.

Third, props to Dave's Surplus/DS tactical for kicking in prizes for the event!

Here's what I learned and how the day went down, in order:
Day at TMSA started cool, it's a mountain, dress warm even in June! Day ended up hot and sunny... not so cool in your 35lb plate carrier then, are ya BCshooterguy? :)

My setup: Tavor with Vortex 1-4x, sling, and a simple belt and dump pouch setup. Review on this as we go.

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ALLLLLL kinds of guns to be found here! Yes that's an SKS.

Stage 1: shoot target at 50, 100, then 6 plates. This is a fairly simple stage for anyone who has shot from bench. Until you get a double feed that adds 45 seconds to your time. This problem started with me not slapping/racking hard enough, and escalated. As a friend of mine says "I can't brain when the nervous!"

First lesson... you can't zero on the day (which I knew ahead of time). So when you're at the bench only range the previous time you are out shooting and your rifle is a little off zero, and you say "f**k it, I'll dial it in next time" and then forget... you'll pay for that. Many people did. I remembered where I was off, roughly. Not great shooting on my part, but I took all the plates down... eventually.
Bring the gun with the best zeroed in scope you have!

Next lesson from stage 1... They say RDS scopes are best for tac rifle. So glad I had the 1-4x on this stage. The top guys all had magnified scopes IIRC.

Stage 2 (we split into teams for the rest of the day) was a speed event, shooting 5 targets at close range, 2 shots per target, with one mag change.
This was super fun, as some of the targets were obscured and you had to change positions as you shot to hit them all.
Lesson here - a 7 second time (NOT my time) with 13 penalty points doesn't beat a 12 second time with no penalty points. It will take me many more stages to learn the time vs penaly thing. :)
Lesson 2 here - 10rd mags win over 5rd pmags.

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Kneeling = +5 on your "to hit" roll.

Stage 3 - a tight CQB type stage, lots of corridors, walls, etc... (the other team shot this as stage 4 I think) Hella-fun! Shoot, move, shoot, move, shoot. This is where the 10rd mags really paid off, with 1/2 the mag changes of the Pmags.
BIG LESSON OF FAIL. The distance between the barrel of a Tavor and the Vortex scope on a mount is about 4". With my already slightly low zero, 4" low on every target is the difference between 0 penalty points and 6 (3pts x 2 holes) on every target.... x10 targets = 60 penalty points. Burn.
At least I didn't shoot through the wood barricade.
LESSON 5 (or are we at 6) Get electronic hearing protection. I had the normal ones, the best that I could get for muffling all sound. Unfortunately, they kept me from hearing the RO behind me saying "YOU CAN'T SHOOT THAT TARGET FROM HERE, YOU HAVE TO GO BACK TO THE LAST STATION..." I'll keep my regular cans for the bench range where I need the extra protection against the big caliber guys, but for tac rifle, I'm going electronic, asap.

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Silveragent (If that IS your real name...) reloads


STAGE 4: Combination between some close quarters and 50yd range, 4 positions to shoot from. Fun stage, lots of things to make holes in. Choosing what to shoot and from where really came into play, as some shots were a lot easier to take from certain places. Unfortunately, my time was marred by a bad mag load (def harder to slap the mag hard on a Tavor over an AR - must work on this), and again forgetting that I was shooting 4-6" low, all the time. Massive penalties here.

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Must... aim.... hiiiiiiiigher.

Final... amazing day, exactly what I got into shooting to do. Overall suggestions for people who want to get into it:

* All you need to do this is a dump pouch. Just make sure you put your mags in pointing the same way you want to take them out to load. Yes, there's a ton of tactical gear, plate carriers, rigs, etc that you can buy. Don't. Just get a $20 dump pouch and try it once. If you want to get tactical, rock it, but it's not needed at all to be competitive.

* Obvious advantage to having LAR mags, though more than 1/2 the people there ran Pmags (including the winner) and one guy had an SKS. Bring what you have and focus on accuracy and having fun.

* Bring water and munchies and keep them handy. You'll be hungry/thirsty way before lunch.

* Bug repellant. Don't spray it in your mouth, it tastes bad.

* Boots or mud shoes with mud traction. Yes.

* I went through 120rds roughly, fwiw.

* Zero your rifle to 50yds, not 100.

That's about it. See you guys next month - I'm hooked!
 
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This event was my first as well. It's amazing how when I have someone timing me and I hear the beep I just start flailing. It felt like a bad date at first. First stage.. complete fail for me. I had a Leupold 1.4-4 AR on my Norc and I did not sight mine in properly -- I usually sighted mine at 25. Could not hit irons targets at 50; shot high so I didn't even know how to adjust (didn't hit dirt) until I quit in exasperation. In later stages I compensated and could get rounds on man-sized target okay.

Glad they split us up into relative newbs and veterans after that. I certainly benefited by the advice given to us. I took most of the other stages at a quick trot rather than run. Previously only shot range and never with sling, kneeling or in any kind of CQB set up at all. Came away with greater respect for professional soldiers and police and gunners who have done this before. I never was much of a paintballer so the movement and fire is completely new to me.

Very fun and learned tons. I enjoyed the atmosphere a lot with a nice mix of people. Smiles and info freely shared. Saw so many great shooters that day too.

After being tired out I found myself a bit confused with the safe direction. Sometimes muzzle up sometimes muzzle down. I understand down-range since I shoot range.

As far as equipment: I wore four AR mag pouches (bought Saturday at DSTactical) on a simple outdoor belt but I see the need for a proper belt with molle, perhaps a harness so it doesn't sag my already saggy pants. I had a dump pouch on other side that was useful but mostly I dropped the mags onto the ground.

Speaking of which, one of my LARs blew up in the middle of a stage, spilling rounds all over the place. That was a laugh and I guess cost me a handful of seconds of confusion before I junked it and stuck in a replacement.

I love the PMAGs. They swap far nicer than the LARs but pinned to 5 still bugs me. My swapping needs practice.

Also I need new boots. My feet were soaked by the end of that. No complaints about my Norc CQA. I'm still far too poor a shooter to care about its accuracy so far.

I look forward to seeing photos and video. Nothing like seeing my saggy ass humping it through the courses.

Course Venue: My first visit to Thompson Mountain and my impression was very positive since at Poco it is very regimented and until recently I've been stuck in the public range. Only problem for me is that it is another 15 minutes of driving on top of the usual 45 minutes of driving I need to get out in that direction. I very much enjoyed the freedom of all the separate mini ranges, however.

Also I won the draw for the door prize! Woohoo! That's a nice knife.

Big thumbs up to the organizers!
 
The irony of my plates was that I didn't feel hot until I took the carrier off after shooting.

Don't discount what you haven't tried, it changes how you handle the rifle and turns every step into a workout. ;)
 
The irony of my plates was that I didn't feel hot until I took the carrier off after shooting.

Don't discount what you haven't tried, it changes how you handle the rifle and turns every step into a workout. ;)


That right there is plenty reason not to for me, however.... I can't really say anything since you beat me soundly. ;)
In fact... maybe next time you should add MORE weight!

PS. whoops remembered your name wrong, edited
 
yep 3 10's 0r 5 pinned 30's ,of course more mags is ALWAYS better!:D 100-120 rds a rig or belt and some good mag pouches, and a sling is a good idea too. that will make shooting way more enjoyably!
 
yep 3 10's 0r 5 pinned 30's ,of course more mags is ALWAYS better!:D 100-120 rds a rig or belt and some good mag pouches, and a sling is a good idea too. that will make shooting way more enjoyably!

Bring extra ammo ... ask the guys in this thread if the b zone steel can't be real devils at times. :evil:

But yes, we try to make the event as easy as possible for new guys to try out.

And great review, thanks so much. :cheers:
 
Bring extra ammo ... ask the guys in this thread if the b zone steel can't be real devils at times. :evil:

But yes, we try to make the event as easy as possible for new guys to try out.

And great review, thanks so much. :cheers:

That stell sure is something special. If you don't get it right away it seems to drain your mags real quick.
 
Sling for sure. Bring 200rds, I'd say, just because the temptation to dump a 10rd LAR into the last target of every stage is pretty tempting when you're forced to do a reload on the last one. :)
(sorry again to the guy who had to tape my targets back up, heh heh heh)
 
LOL!!!
I did enjoy putting the boots to the last target of the day ;)

Had a great time and happy that the authors had a great time.

See you next month!
 
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