This thread bit me in the butt....
I was feeling superior to those of us whom I consider
caught in their habits,
bound by their traditions, and
preconditioned to what they are used to.
Here my post:
For me the long size matters only with open sights, you CANT aim with the rear sight near your nose ! So we have optics Lets measure then, the distance from the back sand bag or shoulder to the front sandbag, bipod or hand, its about the same at both types So the benefits of BP are 1. keep...
www.airgunnation.com
I stand by what I said there:
⭓ that long guns are not
inherently more precise
(geometry, design) —
⭓ but that long guns
for most shooters are more precise than bullpups —
BECAUSE most shooters are more accustomed to long guns (habit, comfort, muscle memory!). And I would like to add this question:
What percentage of shooters
start shooting bullpups without having significant previous experience with long rifles?
➠ I bet, the ratio is 1 to 10.000.
No wonder bullpups have a reputation for not being as precise as long guns...!
So, after feeling slightly superior writing that post there — today
my own traditions, customs, and misconceptions hit me over the head.
I had always heard/read that
mounting the scope close to the barrel is better.
➊ Because,
height increases cant errors — which have been discussed extensively elsewhere — which has convinced me that this is incorrect.
➋ However, MY reason for a low mounted scope was that the point blank range
(PBR) would be so much closer to the gun — something that was really important to me for close range pesting shots.
I always have mounted scopes so low the objective bell seemed to be kissing the barrel shroud.... ➠ M
y habit, my custom, my belief. Well, until I finally just sat down in a chair and opened ChairGun Pro and did a few simple ballistic calculations.
Summary:¹ A scope height difference of
1/2" (1.3cm) only makes
3y (2.5m) difference. THAT is not a lot of difference.
And to gain those 3y, I have to sacrifice a natural and comfortable head position.
For most scenarios, I would say this isn't worth it.
Why did I insist on extremely low mounted scopes, that required coiled necks, twisted heads, and eye acrobatics?!?
Because of
my tradition, my custom, my habit, my belief of ALWAYS mounting scopes as low as the lowest mounts on the market would allow me....
In my case, erroneous habits and incorrect beliefs were easy to debunk — with a few simple ballistic calculations.
However, it's not always that easy.
And we have our own human nature against us:
We are all creatures of habit — much more than we think. And just as bad
habits are hard to break — even
good habits are hard to change when the situation calls for a
better habit. Shooting a style of rifle is no exception
I still have lots to learn.....
Matthias
¹ I'll make a thread about it.