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Hunting
The Basics, Starting Out
bench shooting\help
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<blockquote data-quote="Bravo 4" data-source="post: 214635" data-attributes="member: 8873"><p>Roy is right...about a lot of things usually.</p><p>You did mention a flinching problem you had. If you have a flinching problem with a rifle and keep shooting/flinching you are creating bad habits and muscle memory, IMO. Let somebody else shoot it the same fashion you do and see if the problem still exists. Maybe that should be a universal rule number one: rule out the shooter first. Followed by the simple fixes like checking the mounts/rings. Make sure the action screws are tight. Check the crown for abnormalities. Check for barrel/stock contact. Put another proven scope on it. If none of these fix the problem then I think you really do have a problem.</p><p>With all that said, if you went from shooting over bags on a bench to shooting bipod on a bench and things went crazy....there's your problem, accuracy is consistency.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Bravo 4, post: 214635, member: 8873"] Roy is right...about a lot of things usually. You did mention a flinching problem you had. If you have a flinching problem with a rifle and keep shooting/flinching you are creating bad habits and muscle memory, IMO. Let somebody else shoot it the same fashion you do and see if the problem still exists. Maybe that should be a universal rule number one: rule out the shooter first. Followed by the simple fixes like checking the mounts/rings. Make sure the action screws are tight. Check the crown for abnormalities. Check for barrel/stock contact. Put another proven scope on it. If none of these fix the problem then I think you really do have a problem. With all that said, if you went from shooting over bags on a bench to shooting bipod on a bench and things went crazy....there's your problem, accuracy is consistency. [/QUOTE]
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