The Carlos Hathcock Method of Sighting in a Rifle
An excerpt just to get you started on a good story:
I didn’t know Carlos then and did not know of his exploits in NM and
Sniper shooting. Ted talked to Carlos about it and Carlos stopped by the
shop later that afternoon. Carlos looked at me and said, “So you want to sight in your rifle,
eh? OK, thoroughly clean the bore and chamber. Dry the bore out with
patches just before you come down to Range 4 tomorrow at noon on the 200
yard line. Have the sling on the rifle that you are going to use in
hunting.” Then he went on about his business.
When I got to Range 4 the next day, he had a target in the air ready
for me. He told me to get down in the best prone position I had. He
checked me and adjusted my position just a bit. Then he said, “Before
you shoot. The MOST important thing I want you to do is take your time and make it
the best shot possible. It doesn’t matter how long you take, just make
it a good shot. ALSO, and this is as important, make sure you give me an accurate call
on where you think the bullet hit the target.” After I broke the shot, I
told him where I thought the bullet had hit.
He checked it by using a spotting scope when the target came back up. He
grinned just slightly and said, “not a bad call.” He then took a
screwdriver and adjusted my scope a bit. He had me record everything
possible about the shot and weather, humidity, temperature, wind, how I
felt when the shot went off, what kind of ammo I was using, the date,
and virtually everything about the conditions on the range that day.
I had never seen such a complete and precise recording of such things in
a log book. He told me that if a fly had gone by the rifle and farted
while I was shooting, to make sure I recorded that. Then he told me to thoroughly clean the bore and chamber, and have it
dry when I came back at 12 noon the next day. I was kind of surprised he
only had me shoot once, but when you are getting free lessons – you
don’t question or argue.
The next day, he told me the same thing. I called the shot and it was
closer to the center of the bullseye. He made another slight adjustment
and told me to clean the bore and chamber, dry the bore thoroughly and
come back the next day at noon. Then we recorded everything possible
about that day.
The following day, the shot was darn near exactly centered on the
bullseye. Then he told me to clean and dry the bore before coming back
the next day. Then we recorded everything about that day.
Read the rest over at American Shooting Journal.
1 comment:
Have to train as you fight...
Great stuff.
Not really feasible here in the city.
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