My personal best is Fig 11 at 100m. Now get your helmets on because its time for a war story (Peacekeeping). In 1989 the RCDs where doing a rotation in Cyprus for UNIFCYP on what I recall was Op Snowgoose 56 (will that island ever get its krap together?). Anyways to kill time and get out of Nicosia there was a pistol competition laid on amoung all the various contingents. The team OPI was one Sgt Maj Inghram who I thought was just plugged into the role to get him out of the BBC. For a pistol range we drove out to a old quarry that was in SwedeCon and practiced with the Brownings. Towards the end of the practice, and this is the part that had I not been there and seen this I would not believe it SM Ingham says "hey you see that oil drum" at the other side of a huge pond at what must be 300+Metres, "watch this" says the SSM. He then fired three rounds at the drum and then on the fourth he connects 9mm on drum. It was something to see as it was Bang...........bullet traveling to drum, then................Thunk when it struck. After those first (3) ranging rounds every round connected afterwards so that put paid to just getting lucky. Another thing was the drum was at a different plane then being lower by about 25M. Again had I not been there to see his shooting I would have a hard time believing it as 1. the distance was insane (300+M) 2. he was just shooting that tired old warhorse the BHP with issue ammo and 3. the target was at a negative elevation.
The observations I made was the old SSM had the gun at about 45degree angle (maybe not 45 but it was pretty damn steep and he was saying the thing is to keep the front the drum/target and lower the rear of the pistol your not going to need that rear sight. Being dry and arid watching the fall of shoot aided corrections as a pronounced puff of dust helped getting on target if it was wet or raining then getting on would be much harder and more then three rds to do so.
The observations I made was the old SSM had the gun at about 45degree angle (maybe not 45 but it was pretty damn steep and he was saying the thing is to keep the front the drum/target and lower the rear of the pistol your not going to need that rear sight. Being dry and arid watching the fall of shoot aided corrections as a pronounced puff of dust helped getting on target if it was wet or raining then getting on would be much harder and more then three rds to do so.
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