You are right.
Here's another pic of a guy I'd probably get wrong too.
(shooting an F3, and a nice one at that.)
View attachment 361014
Nope, watch her on YouTube. The video I just watched shows the same mount.
You and I are built similar. I had never considered front hand position and swing speed. I have an SKB 100 SXS that has a smaller fore stock and is lightening fast. I always thought it was because of the shorter barrels and weight. What you say makes more sense as I most certainly hold that gun with my forward hand back on the wood. It is deadly on bush Ruffies but I have missed some real gimmies on open field crossing birds. The back peddling often suggests a pattern ahead of the bird.
Side by sides with their splinter fore ends tend to place your hand a bit further back than most over and unders do which tends to speed up the swing. I find that my front hand is touching a lot of barrel when I shoot my side by sides.
Even with the increase in speed of the side by sides, I find that I can't pull far enough ahead of long fast crosser's as easily as I can with my heavy sporting gun with 31.5 inch barrels. The side by side's just don't have the weight for momentum that I've come to depend upon for long crosser's.
So, we often read about the 4:1 rule as it respects LOP changes. Rollin Oswald suggests if you shorten the stock 1/4 inch, it brings your nose a full inch closer to your knuckle. Also heard this from Gil Ash. I respect both of these teachers a great deal, but the suggestion challenged my ability to visualize. The arm and stock form a triangle - almost equilateral - and I can't see how shortening one of those triangle sides could make a 4x change in a spot on the SAME side?
I've played on the kitchen table with graph paper, calipers, broken pencils and kitchen cutlery so long I darn near ran out of single malt. (That's quite a task around here.) I still can't see how 4:1 works????
No it isn’t but he crawls the stock at at least as much as pictured, maybe worse. I came to the conclusion a long time ago that there is no one proper way to mount a shotgun because even the best shooters are all over the place on mount style. I guess you just go with what works for you.
So, we often read about the 4:1 rule as it respects LOP changes. Rollin Oswald suggests if you shorten the stock 1/4 inch, it brings your nose a full inch closer to your knuckle. Also heard this from Gil Ash. I respect both of these teachers a great deal, but the suggestion challenged my ability to visualize. The arm and stock form a triangle - almost equilateral - and I can't see how shortening one of those triangle sides could make a 4x change in a spot on the SAME side?
I've played on the kitchen table with graph paper, calipers, broken pencils and kitchen cutlery so long I darn near ran out of single malt. (That's quite a task around here.) I still can't see how 4:1 works????
Watched a fella shoot 100 straight from the 27 yard line with his face completely off the stock why?
Because it was a borrowed gun and didn’t fit.
He sounds like to type of guy who could shoot a hundred straight from the hip.... for the rest of us mere mortals we need a good cheek weld!
Keep the wood on the wood!!!!!!![]()
I often think that the ideal LOP is something that is not so long as to hang up under your arm when rapidly mounting the gun or so short that you bump your nose.
Rollin Oswald's book on Gun Fitting .... Highly endorsed : " A-1" Information.
Shooting style definitely influences stock fit. A lot of English shooters grip the barrels as far out as they can reach, which dictates a shorter pull than for someone who places their forehand closer to the action. It's a bit of a chicken/egg problem, in that it's easier to fit a gun to someone who knows how to shoot and has good form, but it's hard to develop good form without a gun that fits. Under English doctrine, even barrel length and gun type ( O/U or SxS ) influence stock dimensions.