Aiming is the next very important element for the top scores achievement. Laymen say it’s a piece of cake. Place concentrically the target, ring and diopter and hit the centre. But, especially with beginners, the problem is to “catch” the black circle in the ring while the positions are not perfect and the rifle walks a lot.
How to aim
First, the shooter should be taught how to aim. He should be shown in a drawing how the sights stand in accordance with the black circle. He then should be given a rifle rested on the support to aim for himself and transfer the picture that he saw on the paper. When he adopts the way the sights stand concerning the target, he can practice aiming while in the position.
Head position
Place the cheek piece of the rifle so that the eye is in the sight line.
With top shooters, aiming is adopted in such a way that it is almost automatic. The shooter is mostly concentrated on triggering and then the aiming errors occur. After triggering, the shooter has to stay in the position for a couple of seconds and check, among other things, if the ring is in the middle of the diopter. Head movement before triggering is the most common error while aiming.
Choice of the ring size and blend
As a rule, the ring should be 1/3 larger than the black circle, but it is not always the case. Depending on the shooter’s versatility, the size of the ring varies. With the beginners the ring should be larger because the rifle walks more and then the shooter can’t concentrate on triggering because the black circle is not in the ring all the time and he has to “hunt” it. The rule applies for top shooters. The blend opening of the diopter has to allow the shooter to see the ring and the target clearly. When the opening is smaller, the black circle is visually enlarged and it merges into the ring. If the opening is too big, the right shape of the ring is lost and the shooter does not have the right picture how he aimed. When the blend opening is too big, head position errors are much larger.
Aiming is the next very important element for the top scores achievement. Laymen say it’s a piece of cake. Place concentrically the target, ring and diopter and hit the centre. But, especially with beginners, the problem is to “catch” the black circle in the ring while the positions are not perfect and the rifle walks a lot.How to aimFirst, the shooter should be taught how to aim. He should be shown in a drawing how the sights stand in accordance with the black circle. He then should be given a rifle rested on the support to aim for himself and transfer the picture that he saw on the paper. When he adopts the way the sights stand concerning the target, he can practice aiming while in the position.Head positionPlace the cheek piece of the rifle so that the eye is in the sight line.With top shooters, aiming is adopted in such a way that it is almost automatic. The shooter is mostly concentrated on triggering and then the aiming errors occur. After triggering, the shooter has to stay in the position for a couple of seconds and check, among other things, if the ring is in the middle of the diopter. Head movement before triggering is the most common error while aiming.Choice of the ring size and blendAs a rule, the ring should be 1/3 larger than the black circle, but it is not always the case. Depending on the shooter’s versatility, the size of the ring varies. With the beginners the ring should be larger because the rifle walks more and then the shooter can’t concentrate on triggering because the black circle is not in the ring all the time and he has to “hunt” it. The rule applies for top shooters. The blend opening of the diopter has to allow the shooter to see the ring and the target clearly. When the opening is smaller, the black circle is visually enlarged and it merges into the ring. If the opening is too big, the right shape of the ring is lost and the shooter does not have the right picture how he aimed. When the blend opening is too big, head position errors are much larger.
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