Author Topic: How's this plinkin' pattern?  (Read 1429 times)

Offline Vermillion

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How's this plinkin' pattern?
« Reply #15 on: December 16, 2002, 03:12:27 PM »
Yah but with the Mak-90 you have 30 or 40 rounds before reloading !! ;)

Offline SOB

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How's this plinkin' pattern?
« Reply #16 on: December 16, 2002, 03:36:47 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by Ripsnort
Curval, in your defense, all I can say is:
You never shoot your best game of pool with someone else's pool cue...
;)


So, you guys shared a room, eh?


SOB
Three Times One Minus One.  Dayum!

Offline Dune

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Re: Curval
« Reply #17 on: December 16, 2002, 04:55:42 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by GtoRA2
I had a Mak90, a cheap Chinese AKM. At 100yards it would do like 8 inches.

I have (still) a ruger blackhawk, single six imn .357 that I could keep them all in the 8 inches at 100 yards with from a rest.

I prolly could not do it now, I do not shoot enough.

Hblair, I say that aint to bad for an auto, what is it a sig229, 228?  

9mm?


My .300 H&H Mag Winchester Model 70 will shoot under Minute of Angle (.3/4 inch) at 100 and 200 from a bench.  My Ruger M77 in .308 will shoot under 1/2 inch.

:D

Offline lazs2

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How's this plinkin' pattern?
« Reply #18 on: December 16, 2002, 05:16:25 PM »
Most good rifles will shoot around 1 MOA.  one inch at 100yards..  I can get 8-12" groups at 100 yards with my 7" redhawk in 44 mag.

curval... wanna bet I can keep all the rounds in beetles VW at 400 yards?  Do you mind beetle?
lazs

Offline Curval

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How's this plinkin' pattern?
« Reply #19 on: December 16, 2002, 05:28:35 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by lazs2
curval... wanna bet I can keep all the rounds in beetles VW at 400 yards?  Do you mind beetle?
lazs


Something tells me I'd lose money on that bet.;)
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Offline Ripsnort

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How's this plinkin' pattern?
« Reply #20 on: December 16, 2002, 06:07:30 PM »
Fine looking son Hblair, do you clean the weapons with your son yet?  Get 'em in a good habit, young! My 7 yr. old can break down my 1100 (rather simple) but he's alittle messy with the oil :(

Offline midnight Target

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How's this plinkin' pattern?
« Reply #21 on: December 16, 2002, 07:23:42 PM »
Wow!

All my bullets usually hit the red thingy in the middle.





:)

Offline AKDejaVu

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Re: Re: Curval
« Reply #22 on: December 16, 2002, 08:25:26 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by Dune
My .300 H&H Mag Winchester Model 70 will shoot under Minute of Angle (.3/4 inch) at 100 and 200 from a bench.  My Ruger M77 in .308 will shoot under 1/2 inch.

:D
My Model 700 .308 will shoot just over .308 at 100 yards. ;)

AKDejaVu

Offline hblair

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How's this plinkin' pattern?
« Reply #23 on: December 16, 2002, 09:28:04 PM »
GtoRA2, it's a p229 .40cal
Rip I don't let them near the gun, I keep it locked up in the toolbox in the truck with me. Even looking at that jpg with the empty gun with the slide back pointed in dylans direction gives me the shakes. Guess I need to loosen up a bit.

Offline eagl

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How's this plinkin' pattern?
« Reply #24 on: December 16, 2002, 09:57:52 PM »
hblair that's not bad shooting for a casual shooter, assuming that the number of holes in the target is the number of rounds you put downrange :)  Practice makes perfect and I suggest joining a local club if they offer courses.  The NRA has a lot of different competitions and chances are you might find one of them fun enough to get you out on the range more often.

When I was shooting standard pistol in college (.22 cal, one handed grip), I'd put all shots except stoopid twitch-pulls in about a 5-6 inch circle at the competition range, but I can't remember what the exact range was.  20 or 25 yards if I recall correctly, but I don't remember.  I practiced a lot though plus the coach said I'm a natural.  My rapid-fire accuracy was better than my slow-fire accuracy, which drove the coach (ex-olympic shooter) nuts.  Too much caffine was the culprit methinks, and I got knocked off of the first team prior to nationals by another shooter who drank less mt dew and wasn't trying to finish a computer science degree.  I was ok with the pellet guns but just not quite consistent enough day to day to beat the really talented guys, and I only shot my senior year so I didn't have much of a chance to improve over time.

My browning buckmark is more accurate than I am, but I'm not satisfied with the grip.  I'd like to find a custom wooden grip with the little adjustable platform and finger notches, but so far every store I've been to just gives me a goofy look like I'm asking for something really weird.  I guess I should go to more competitions and ask the competitors where they get their equipment.  I'm not going to spend $4000 for a Pardini though...

I learned a lot of good techniques from reading cheesy-but-historically-accurate westerns, and my dad was an expert marksman in the marine corps so he taught me everything he could whenever we went out shooting.

With my beretta .40, I can group 40 rounds in a 10 inch target at 25 yards without bracing and I've shot expert (wimpy USAF course, not the more challenging navy course) in the old short-barrel military S&W .38 revolvers, 9mm beretta, and M-16.  The only time I missed expert on a military range was when I'd just completed 400 pushups that morning and was having muscle spasms in my arms while shooting.  I still got 25/40 shots on target, but the others went into the dirt and I think I lofted one or two over the 30 ft tall backstop :eek:  I almost pulled myself off the line because I was a true hazard to the world, but I figured as long as I didn't actually drop the gun nobody would notice :rolleyes:

My best ever rifle shot was a 6-round group the size of a quarter at 200 yards.  7mm remmington magnum, browning A-bolt with the BOSS anti-recoil and barrel tuning system.  The next dozen rounds expanded to a 3 inch group due to quickly growing shoulder pain from the recoil.  On the way home I stopped at a gun store and bought a shoulder pad :)

There are books on shooting technique too, so maybe check the local library or NRA catalog.

« Last Edit: December 16, 2002, 10:08:17 PM by eagl »
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Offline lazs2

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How's this plinkin' pattern?
« Reply #25 on: December 17, 2002, 08:22:15 AM »
Most handguns should shoot under 4" at 25 yards.   My 44's shoot about 2" from a rest.    But... If I can cover my group with my fist I'm happy.    A 50 yard group that is all in the black is pretty decent too.
lazs

Offline beet1e

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How's this plinkin' pattern?
« Reply #26 on: December 17, 2002, 10:35:03 AM »
Quote
wanna bet I can keep all the rounds in beetles VW at 400 yards? Do you mind beetle?
ROFL!  You have as much chance of doing that as I have aiming a gallon of gas into a car's fuel filler inlet in Oregon. And for the same reason - not allowed. You can't bring your gun anywhere near my beetle, and I can't pump gas in Oregon. So try the next best thing - talk to my beetle in your best Alec Guinness accent, and see if it moves - lol.

Offline StSanta

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How's this plinkin' pattern?
« Reply #27 on: December 17, 2002, 11:01:41 AM »
This is such BS. You guys have any idea what I hae to go through just to shoot a .22 handgun? :(

I hate you all.

Offline mrfish

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How's this plinkin' pattern?
« Reply #28 on: December 17, 2002, 11:03:32 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by hblair
GtoRA2, it's a p229 .40cal
Rip I don't let them near the gun, I keep it locked up in the toolbox in the truck with me. Even looking at that jpg with the empty gun with the slide back pointed in dylans direction gives me the shakes. Guess I need to loosen up a bit.


you don't need to loosen up at all- i felt the same way looking at that picture, it's the first thing i noticed. but obviously the gun is empty...

think of it this way hb- it's a much better thing to have kids that are educated about guns and know how to handle them safely and properly than to have kids that are mystified by them and see them as 'forbidden fruit'.

you might be saving their lives without even knowing it.

Offline Dune

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How's this plinkin' pattern?
« Reply #29 on: December 17, 2002, 11:06:58 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by StSanta
This is such BS. You guys have any idea what I hae to go through just to shoot a .22 handgun? :(

I hate you all.


Handguns are bad for you.  If you even look at one you're lible to want to run around shooting innocent people.  That is, of course, if the gun doesn't go off by itself and shoot you and everyone in the building.  Guns do that you know.  God forbid you touch one.  Then everyone in your family will become kill-crazed maniacs and start killing whole resturants.  

:D