As Promised…

Tips, tricks and lessons learned for sighting rifles…

Sighting in rifles is always interesting, even more with scopes. Here’s what I’ve learned over (mumble) years of screwups, multiple tries, and lots of help from people that actually KNOW what they are doing…

1st assumption- You have already bore sighted, laser sighted, used a collimator to get the sights/scope pretty close to on…

2nd assumption- You have reviewed your ballistics tables for the round you are going to zero/hunt with (and it’s the same round). You’ve recorded the altitude, weather (temp, humidity, etc.). This becomes the base for the ‘dope’ for that rifle/scope/round combo. If you know you are zeroing at/near sea level, and know you will be hunting at 4-6000 feet of altitude, you will know what corrections you will need when you get on site to re-zero the rifle.

Set up-
Target- Use a target that has the 1 inch blocks printed on the target, makes it MUCH easier to determine how far off one is…

Spotting scope- Nice to have, or you’re gonna be doing a LOT of walking back and forth. You can spend a little or a LOT on one, your choice…

Rifle Rest- If you are using something like a Caldwell’s Lead Sled (which are NICE, but pricey), don’t exceed 25 lbs of weight on the sled. You DO want the rifle to be able to recoil at least a little bit. If you put too much weight on it, you risk damaging the stock due to the action slamming back into the stock with NO movement (remember, most rifles are NOT fully bedded so only screws and the recoil lug are the only thing holding them in the stock). You want the front arm to hold the rifle as near the barrel end of the scope as possible, and seated as well as possible in the pad; for the butt, place it firmly into the pad and rest your shooting hand on the rifle, use the other hand to manipulate the front arm to get the proper height and aimpoint for the rifle.

If you use a bipod for the front, you are stuck with its position on the forward end of the stock. if you use a tripod /rifle rest/sandbag for the front, position it at the barrel end of the scope, or just forward of the receiver group at the thickest part of the stock (this should also be just forward of the balance point of the rifle). For the butt, use your choice of bags, but here is where it gets interesting…

Use the bags to get the proper aim point WITHOUT having to squeeze the bags. What you want to get in either case is a STABLE, REPEATABLE position for the rifle. Trust me, you can’t do that if you’re sitting there trying to squeeze a bag up, or pressing down to try to ‘flatten’ one out to get your aim point.

Clean barrel or fouling shots- You can clean your barrel with acetone to remove the light oil you (hopefully) put in the rifle the last time you cleaned it. One patch with acetone should remove the oil and allow a ‘clean’ shot on the first shot. If you choose fouling shots, run a clean patch through the bore before you start, then 3-4 fouling shots (don’t look at this as a group, because they may be flyers).

Wait 20 minutes… Why? Give the rifle time to cool down. You want to shoot what are effectively cold bore shots out of any rifle that doesn’t have a heavy barrel.

If you’re bored, go google rifle barrel harmonics– Harmonics and barrel flex are real, and play a significant part in rifle accuracy (more on that later). Also, heat weakens the barrel and allows more flex/harmonics (e.g. wider pattern of flyers). It may be that your rifle doesn’t ‘like’ a particular load, so it is always advisable to have at least a couple of different weight bullets available to check grouping (for example, my rifle does not like 168gr bullets, but does like 173-175 gr bullets (to the tune of about ½ inch tighter groups; while a friend with the identical rifle is just the opposite).

Body position- Get into a comfortable, stable shooting position, minimizing tension on the body (preferably similar to the shooting position you will use in the field). Confirm your sight picture is correct or adjust as required (no squeezing the bag)…

Do NOT put your off hand on the weapon anywhere, put it flat on the shooting bench or curled under your shooting hand.

WITH THE CHAMBER EMPTY, assume the position, get a good cheek weld, put your shooting hand on the weapon such that your palm is touching the stock in the proper position to place your finger on the trigger, DO NOT wrap your thumb over the top of the stock. Re-confirm your sight picture is correct or adjust as required (no squeezing the bag), (some people use mnemonics to confirm position, breathing, trigger pull), continue pulling the trigger until you get a surprise break on the dry fire (the sight picture should NOT change). Look at the sight picture again, if it is off to either side, you are not getting a straight pull back on the trigger and your rounds are NOT going to go where you think you’re aiming.

Lather, rinse, repeat until you get the correct finger position that does not move the rifle/change the sight picture during the trigger squeeze. Once you have done that, fire three rounds using exactly the same sight picture, hold, mnemonic, and trigger pull.

Note- you don’t need to do this fast, as you want the barrel to stay at/near ambient.

If you shoot a called flyer, shoot one more to get a good three shot group.

Once you have that group, look at the error (hopefully a fairly small one). Let’s say you are 2 in high and 1 in left. Make the BIGGER correction first, and shoot three more rounds (using the techniques above). Confirm that correcting ‘worked’, then make the smaller correction and repeat. At this point you ‘should’ be on target. If your scope is a ¼ min/click you can further refine if you desire, if it’s 1min/click, you’re done, same if it’s iron sights.

I know people claim they can zero a rifle in 2 shots, but honestly I’ve never been able to do that… Guess I’m just a dummy…

If you need to zero for 200x and only have a 100x range, look at your ballistics curve for the ammo you are shooting, look at your 200x zero and it will give you the ‘over’ at 100x (usually around an inch with most ammo).

Very carefully loosen the caps on your scope and readjust to the new zero position and re-tighten as necessary. If you have a BDC cap, I’d recommend another three shot group with a different range to check zero (e.g. select 300x BDC and the rounds should be appx 2-3 inches high depending on ballistics table).

If you have standard caps, I’d recommend zero of 200x for hunting as anything between 100x and 300x will hit within about +/-3 inches of aim point across those ranges.

At this point, I’m done; I don’t clean the rifle again until hunting is complete for the year. I also will always do at least one cold bore shot at 100x before I go into the field to hunt, just to make sure nothing got knocked loose in transit!

Disclaimer- There are tons of how to sight rifle links on the net, and plenty of forums and blogs that detail this also. These happen to be mine, based on MY experiences. YMMV, INAL, etc…

And I was not paid nor do I endorse specific products with this post, I simply did searches to find the first hits on Google for products, so there…

Shoot em good folks!

AIT Can’t Store Images, My Ass…

Well, ‘maybe’ images OF my ass…

And has anyone else noted there are NO test pictures of anything but a gun or a knife on the model??? What about those ‘explosives’ they are supposed to be catching???

Pulled from a FlyerTalk discussion thread…

The TSA RFP (the one EPIC posted before) requires the ability to store images (yes, it did say training mode) and required specific levels of personnel have the capability to enable that mode and permit captures. People at those specific levels are assigned at the airport level from what other sources have stated. Also those machines apparently have both Ethernet and USB slots…

AND they run on Windoze, so two keystrokes allow a screen capture of anything on the screen at the time. And anyone want to bet there are NO camera phones in those ‘secure’ rooms???

Also, if vendors have installed machines at the airport checkpoints without that capability (the ability to go into training mode and capture/store images), then they are in violation of the Federal Acquisition Regulations for failure to comply with deliverable specifications and should be reported to the GAO for investigation.


And you can go HERE and read about the scientists questions concerning the safety of the devices…

The ones I really feel for are the TSAers that have to work there everyday and are getting MAJOR levels of X-ray/MM wave… As I said, I asked for the MSDS and was told I didn’t need to see it…

Vote with your feet and pocketbooks… Opt Out and don’t fly unless it’s an emergency… And if you REALLY want to piss em off, ask the TSAers why they can’t just profile the bad guys…

And go over to the End Times Hoax and read their Opt Out ‘song’ 🙂

Opt Out and No Fly Wednesdays…

I’ve cancelled my Thanksgiving trip, so will not see my daughters and grandson as I’m NOT flying and putting up with the BS at the airports. I will also opt out of any MM wave or backscatter scanners, since I cannot get the details on the amount of radiation each one puts out. I rather pointedly asked that question last Sunday at Tulsa and was told by a supervisor, “you don’t need that information”. It seems to me if they were really that safe, there would be Material Safety Data Sheets (MSDS) available… We’re ALL required to have those in our workplaces for any materials…

I fully support the plans of Opt Out and National Opt Out Day doing this on a mass scale on the 24th of November, but I would also propose a separate and comprehensive ongoing No Fly project.

I’d propose that EVERY WEDNESDAY all travellers than can REFUSE TO FLY, either by rescheduling their trips, or taking other means of transport. And that we CONTINUE this until the airlines get tired of losing money and force TSA drop the BS politically correct screening and start profiling and actually searching for the bad guys (and when they find suspicious persons, THEY get the full treatment).

I’d also be more than willing to see ALL of the US airlines adopt El Al’s procedures (unclassified data shown below) as they DO WORK!!!

Security
As a target for many decades, El Al employs stringent security procedures, both on the ground and on board its aircraft. These effective, though sometimes controversial, procedures have won El Al a reputation for security. In 2008, the airline was named by Global Traveler magazine as the world’s most secure airline.

Airport security measures-
Passengers are asked to report three hours before departure. All El Al terminals around the world are closely monitored for security. There are plain-clothes agents and fully armed police or military personnel who patrol the premises for explosives, suspicious behavior, and other threats (including US airports). Inside the terminal, passengers and their baggage are checked by a trained team. El Al security procedures require that all passengers be interviewed individually prior to boarding, allowing El Al staff to identify possible security threats. Passengers will be asked questions about where they are coming from, the reason for their trip, their job or occupation, and whether they have packed their bags themselves. The likelihood of potential terrorists remaining calm under such questioning is believed to be low (see microexpression).

At the check-in counter, passengers’ passports and tickets are closely examined. A ticket without a sticker from the security checkers will not be accepted. At passport control passengers’ names are checked against information from the FBI, Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS), Scotland Yard, Shin Bet, and Interpol databases. Luggage is screened and sometimes hand searched. In addition, bags are put through a decompression chamber simulating pressures during flight that could trigger explosives. El Al is the only airline in the world that passes all luggage through such a chamber. Even at overseas airports, El Al security agents conduct all luggage searches personally, even if they are supervised by government or private security firms.

Flight security measures-

Undercover agents (sometimes referred to as sky marshals) carrying concealed firearms sit among the passengers on every international El Al flight. All El Al pilots are former Israeli Air Force pilots. The cockpits in all El Al aircraft have double doors to prevent entry by unauthorized persons. A code is required to access the doors, and the second door will only be opened after the first has closed and the person has been identified by the captain or first officer. Furthermore, there are reinforced steel floors separating the passenger cabin from the baggage hold.

El Al is my airline of preference when I’m overseas and having been through both US and El Al procedures, I MUCH prefer the El Al procedures, and I feel a hellva lot safer on one of their birds (and I don’t have to get groped to get on the airplane)… Just sayin…

Jails vs. nursing homes!!!


With apologies to Snigs and the others who work in the health care arena…

I’m thinking “not such a bad idea”…

Here’s the way it should be:
Let’s put the seniors in jail and the criminals in nursing homes.

This would correct two things in one motion:
Seniors would have access to showers, hobbies and walks.
They would receive unlimited free prescriptions, dental and medical treatment, wheel chairs, etc.
They would receive money instead of having to pay it out.
They would have constant video monitoring, so they would be helped instantly if they fell or needed assistance.
Bedding would be washed twice a week and all clothing would be ironed and returned to them.
A guard would check on them every 20 minutes.
All meals and snacks would be brought to them
They would have family visits in a suite built for that purpose.
They would have access to a library, weight/fitness room, spiritual counseling, a pool and education…and free admission to in-house concerts by nationally recognized entertainment artists.
Simple clothing, I.e.., shoes, slippers, pj’s – and legal aid would be free, upon request.
There would be private, secure rooms provided for all with an outdoor exercise yard complete with gardens.
Each senior would have a P.C., T.V., phone and radio in their room at no cost.
They would receive daily phone calls.
There would be a board of directors to hear any complaints and the ACLU would fight for their rights and protection.
The guards would have a code of conduct to be strictly adhered to, with attorneys available, at no charge to protect the seniors and their families from abuse or neglect.
There would be doctors and nurses readily available for them.

As for the criminals:

They would receive cold food.
They would be left alone and unsupervised.
They would receive showers once a week.
They would live in tiny rooms, for which they would have to pay $5,000 per month.
They would have no hope of ever getting out.
Depending on the schedule they might or might not get a nurse or a doctor to actually answer the call button.

Sounds like justice to me!!! 🙂

PSA- The Rest of the Story…

To grope or not to grope… That was the Option at Tulsa today, as they ONLY have the millimeter wave porn machines at the airport. When the person in front of me was told to take their belts and shoes off and empty everything out I’d their pockets, including MONEY, WALLETS, and take off ALL JEWELRY and put it in the bin, which they could not see during the scanning, I opted out.


This was immediately called out in a loud voice and three TSAers segregated me, so the rest of the herd would go passively… I was then told I had to remove everything and I would be “patted” down. When the TSAer started to walk off with the tub with my money, watch and cell phones; I told him to stop, that I wanted everything to remain in my view. That didn’t go over well either…

I was then groped, just flat NO other word for it… sigh… I need a new career that DOESN’T involve flying…

I will be filing a complaint when I get back to DC, but I’ll bet nothing happens.

The other interesting thing is that they put THREE of these units at Tulsa, where I doubt they EVER get a politician or high official that will ever transit through the airport. If they were decent leaders, the first units would have been at Reagan National and the congresscritters and high administration officials would have been the first users…

Wow… Just Wow…

Perusing the tables at Wanenmacher’s Gun Show at Tulsa I saw $4000 Colt Pythons and Diamondbacks, $400 sets of grips (wood), $37,000-$43,000 Winchester Rifles, and the piece de resistance, a $169,650 Holland and Holland #1 Grade 577 Nitro Express Double Rifle! That thing had EVERY inch of it engraved, never been fired, built in the late 1930’s early 1940’s… I didn’t even breathe on that thing!!!

Saw a few old friends, found out another old friend has died, and once again marveled at how one friend comes up with some of the guns he does (SEVEN Colts with original factory engraving!)…

Met up with Jim Garber and wandered a bit, cussed the prices ($4.50 for a coke) and saw some amazing displays down in Ego Alley (downstairs)…

One funny incident- my friend had an old muzzle loader for sale, a guy dropped a bore light down the rifle, and the light STUCK!!! Talk about a stunned look on his face 🙂

And my friend couldn’t resist, he said, “Well, guess you bought it now!” And the guy DID, after they finally got the bore light out!!!

Off to see what I can see today, hands will be kept FIRMLY in pockets… sigh…

Applebees lost money…

I met up with friends from Texarkana last night at the hotel in Tulsa, then Jim Garber called, so we decided to meet at Applebees for dinner since they were giving free meals to Veterans. We got there and there was literally a line out the door! 30-45 minute wait, and I literally saw three generations (at least) of Veterans waiting PATIENTLY to be served… It’s not like we haven’t stood in line once or twice before… People were chatting back and forth, comparing service, comparing generations, etc. Jim was having a ‘bit’ of a navigation issue (he didn’t believe the restaurant existed) so he was a bit late…


We ended up sharing a table with a young Airman and his family and our waiter was a Marine Reservist with two tours in the Sandbox who is finishing his degree in Dec and heading back to TBS then back downrange. Needless to say, the jokes were flying fast and furious…

I had to step out to take a phone call, and the manager came out as I was finishing; we chatted for a couple of minutes, and I asked him how it was going, he said he expected they would “lose” $4-5000 for the day, and he was perfectly happy with it!!!

He said they had been giving Veterans a free meal all day, and estimated they had served between 5-600 Veterans just at that one location. He also said he was amazed at the camaraderie and lack of complaints about the wait or tables, or anything else…

Thank you Applebees!

EDIT- Go HERE and watch this one… One of the best I’ve seen…

Veterans’ Day…

If you know a veteran, please thank them today for their service. If you don’t, please take a minute and say a prayer for all the veterans who didn’t come home…

To all my friends who served, a toast- “Absent comrades!”


And now a bit of history about the Lone Sailor Statue in DC…


The Lone Sailor© is a composite of the U.S. Navy bluejacket, past, present and future. He’s called the Lone Sailor, yet he is hardly ever alone, standing there on the broad granite plaza which forms the amphitheater of the Navy Memorial. Visitors to the Memorial are immediately drawn to him to peer into his far seeing eyes, to admire him or size him up, to see if he’s as tough or as gentle as he seems. Visitors find that he is all that he seems and probably more.

The founders of the Navy Memorial envisioned this Lone Sailor at 25 years old at most, a senior second class petty officer who is fast becoming a seagoing veteran. He has done it all – fired his weapons in a dozen wars, weighed anchor from a thousand ports, tracked supplies, doused fires, repelled boarders, typed in quadruplicate and mess-cooked, too. He has made liberty call in great cities and tiny villages, where he played tourist, ambassador, missionary to the poor, adventurer, souvenir shopper and friend to new lands. His shipmates remember him with pride and tell their grandchildren stories, some of which, like him, are seven feet tall.

The bronze statue is the creation of Stanley Bleifeld, the United States NavyMemorial’s official sculptor, selected by a board of recognized art authorities from a field of 36 sculptors identified in a six month, nationwide search. A native of New York City, Bleifeld maintains a studio at his home in Weston, Connecticut, and also inPietrasanta, Italy.

Stanley Bleifeld served in the Navy in World War II. Like many other talented artists at the time, he was assigned as an illustrator for Navy training manuals; he never went into battle, but he helped train those who did.

After so long an absence from the Navy, Bleifeld visited the fleet and other Navy activities to help him see anew the American sailor in the sea environment; he further focused his impressions in meetings with the Secretary of the Navy, the Chief of Naval Operations, other senior officer and enlisted personnel, and his patrons — the Navy Memorial Foundation officers, staff and board members. These patrons represented literally hundreds of years of Navy experience and acquaintance with the Lone Sailor.

The process of conceptualization, modeling, sculpting, and casting went through five initial images, four different models, and well over a year of work before culminating in the unveiling at the formal dedication of the Memorial on October 13, 1987 – on the anniversary of the Navy’s birthday.

The third model of a strong and brash young man leaning over a cleat, although very well received, was passed up in favor of an upright model. However a full casting of this model, dubbed the “Liberty Hound”, was subsequently commissioned for the Jacksonville Navy Memorial in Jacksonville, Florida.

As part of the casting process, the bronze for The Lone Sailor© was mixed with artifacts from eight U. S. Navy ships, provided by the curator for the Navy in the Naval Historical Center at the Washington Navy Yard. The ships span the Navy’s history, yielding small pieces of copper sheeting, spikes, hammock hooks and other fragments from the post-revolutionary frigates Constitution (“Old Ironsides“) and Constellation; the steamer Hartford, flagship of Admiral David G. Farragut in the Civil War era; the battleship USS Maine; the iron-hulled steamer/sailing ship USS Ranger; the World War II-era cruiser USS Biloxi and aircraft carrier USS Hancock, and the nuclear-powered submarine USS Seawolf. One last addition was a personal decoration from today’s Navy, one given to sailors in war and peace, the National Defense Service Medal. These bits of metal are now part of The Lone Sailor©.

Reaction to The Lone Sailor© has been gratifying. “He certainly represents us,” is the claim heard from nearly every Navy community, active or retired. The Navy Memorial Foundation regularly receives telephone calls or notes from Navy veterans or their families wondering where the Foundation obtained their photograph as the model for the statue. The Lone Sailor© is impressive to people who have never served in the Navy and powerfully so for those who have served.

“You would want this guy at your battle station when it’s not a drill,” former Master Chief Petty Officer of the Navy Billy C. Sanders says of The Lone Sailor©. “He is the classic American sailor. That statue looks like bronze, but there is plenty of salt, paint, sweat, fuel oil and courage stirred in.”

I was very proud to receive a miniature statue of the Lone Sailor from the Admiral on my retirement…

How real IS our military training???

The link HERE is what is currently being done at 29 Palms (better known as 29 Stumps to those in the know).

It is a semi-commercial for the company that is providing the training equipment and personnel, but it’s worth the 12 minutes to get a ‘feel’ for what our folks are being trained for. Note- There are some graphic scenes of both real and simulated injuries…

This takes Tigerland at Fort Polk (from the Vietnam era) to a whole new level of reality…
As as evidenced by the interviews, is doing a good job of preparing our troops for what they may face in the war zone.
Oh yeah, Happy 235th to all the Jarheads 🙂 Semper Fi my friends!