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One of Us |
I have one from vertebrae in Norway that is good. I have the David Tubb stuff. I have the Brian Litz stuff. I have the Defensive Edge stuff. and I have the stuff from Accuracy First. All of it is good. Some is better than others. The free training that Gunwerks has online and on their DVD is also solid. what are some other options? | ||
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One of Us |
The best option would be to practice at said distances by doping & calling shots prior to experimenting on game animals. Clanging gongs or busting rocks isn't precision shooting it's guessing! | |||
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One of Us |
I shoot out to about 1300 pretty regularly. We have a big BLM property that I dump a target on and then drive down the road until I am .8 miles in the truck. I shoot the 100-600 yard gongs several times a week. I disagree on gongs. They give instant feedback, that no spotting scope can get you on. | |||
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one of us |
Agree as well re: gongs, and rocks to the same thing. Allows to see exactly how well you called the wind. Unless you have someone pulling frames and marking every shot, shooting paper doesn't cut it. Even then, most ranges have berms that make wind "unnatural." They also have flags that make it too easy to just look at the flag and not really dope it like you would in the field. | |||
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One of Us |
We don't have a NRA Fullbore range here, so no pits, and no marked targets. We do have tons of burms, and they play hell with wind. I have found the most use out of driving to a power line on BLM and setting up my gong and driving as far away as I want to get that day. Then I'll reverse it and shoot it in the opposite wind. We are lucky with BLM where we live. | |||
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