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  #1  
Old 10-20-2012, 05:09 PM
Gil Martin Gil Martin is offline
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Friends who does not shoot well

I have a friend and hunting partner who is a great guy, but cannot shoot very well. Last Wednesday, I threw 75 clay pigeons for him and he hit about five of them. I was trying to coach and throw birds, but that did not work very well. I have suggested he get some training from competent shooters. He does not want to admit he needs help. He says he just needs to get used to his gun. He buys a new shotgun every year and his shooting performance does not change. Anybody have a similar experience? All the best..
Gil
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  #2  
Old 10-20-2012, 06:49 PM
skeet skeet is offline
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Dominant eye problem..What it sounds like..
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Old 10-21-2012, 05:03 AM
Gil Martin Gil Martin is offline
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The fellow shoots off the right shoulder and can hit pheasants. I suspect that he does not lead clay targets properly, aims instead of points his shotgun and stops his swing. Other than that he does just fine.

To determine if it was a dominant eye matter, I had him shoot a rifle at a target at 50 yards and he shot a nice group. All the best...
Gil
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  #4  
Old 10-21-2012, 09:03 AM
skeet skeet is offline
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Gil..shootin a rifle and a shotgun are two entirely different things. You consciously AIM a rifle and many close the off side eye..in shotgun shooting you do it differently .. There are many ways to check dominant eys..rifle shootin isn't one of them.. And another thing..even if it isn't an eye thing..he may be shooting the shotgun like a rifle...ie..trying to aim...and that won't work either..
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Old 10-21-2012, 12:40 PM
powell&hyde powell&hyde is offline
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It does sound like a dominant eye problem, you can give your shooting buddy a test at home by having him hold out a finger at a target at least 20 feet away (picture on a wall) and closing one eye at a time. Upon closing one eye at at time, the one eye that has the target dead center is the dominant eye.
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Old 10-21-2012, 01:27 PM
skeet skeet is offline
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What P&H says is right..but also..rifle and pistol shooters take more time and try to squeeze triggers too. Ya gotta slap a shotgun trigger..just different kind of shooting. Being a shotgun shooter it is hard for me to be a good rifle shot. When ya shoot a shotgun..ya want to get it over yesterday..if ya know what I mean. when you shoot well over a million shotgun shells in your youth..and maybe 25,000 rifle pistol..hard to get over that trigger on a shotgun...even if it was 12 lbs..the sucker went off..
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Old 10-22-2012, 07:52 AM
buckhunter buckhunter is offline
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I had that problem once with a brand new 11-87. Went a wopping 0-25 on the trap field. Found out the gun was shooting about 4 feet low. Have him pattern his sg. May or may not be the answer. Also if he's shooting a 12ga have him try a 20ga. May help.
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Old 10-30-2012, 05:56 AM
skeeter@ccia.com skeeter@ccia.com is offline
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Not sure but I shotgun with both eyse open..same as with all open sights..and pattern gun is big thing..I go 25 feet.(not yards) and aim at the X from bench rest with shotgun..you would be amazed how far off some are at that distance..I have one shoots a good 6 inches low and right at that X.. fixed sights..will work on it..but is good points as mentioned other posts..another one shoots 2" right..now go figure reach out with shot and how far off will you be?..this is a good way to sight in shotgun..now you have a little hole in target POA/POI as opposed to count BB in circle..works..
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Old 10-30-2012, 10:48 AM
skeet skeet is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by buckhunter View Post
I had that problem once with a brand new 11-87. Went a wopping 0-25 on the trap field. Found out the gun was shooting about 4 feet low.
Some of the first 11-87 shotguns that had screw in chokes were messed up. The screw ins were mis-aligned. I also had one. Rem replaced the barrel. I also had an 11-87 that didn't have screw ins..They did make a few. That first Rem Choke bbl was off by at least 3 ft. I also had a fellow bring a Browning invector barrel to me that was off by that far too. One of the few things I sent to Browning that they didn't argue about..They replaced it..but it took 'em 3 months..or more.
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Old 10-30-2012, 12:56 PM
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Rapier Rapier is offline
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I had a very long explanation for this but these guys tell the story much better:

http://www.americanhunter.org/articl...t-shotgun-fit/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jLLnGM3DXE0
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tXo0W...feature=relmfu

A properly fitting shotgun is 99% of the struggle and to never, ever, look at the bead.
Ed
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Old 11-01-2012, 05:53 PM
Adam Helmer Adam Helmer is offline
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Gil,

I have had problem shooters like your friend on my ranges in the past. The guys offered fine advice. I concur; pattern the shotgun first. Second, have that right handed shooter put masking tape over his left glasses lense and have him look AT the bird and NOT the front bead. Lastly, have him get in front of the bird he is looking at when he slaps the shotgun trigger.

Good luck.

Adam
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  #12  
Old 11-01-2012, 07:07 PM
Gil Martin Gil Martin is offline
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Adam

I agree and I also believe that friends probably should not train friends in the shooting sports. He needs professional coaching, but does not believe he has a problem. I have tried to get him to shoot stationery targets on the ground. He hits them OK. Aerial targets are a challenge. All the best...
Gil

P.S, Looks like you got your computer back on line. Well done.
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  #13  
Old 11-02-2012, 08:01 AM
buckhunter buckhunter is offline
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Gil,

Hows his eye's. Being a little advanced in age I find it more difficult to pick up and react to the target. I had a older man I hunted with was deadly a decade ago. Now its scarey to go in the woods with him. He just can't see that well.
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  #14  
Old 11-02-2012, 09:40 AM
Adam Helmer Adam Helmer is offline
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Gil,

One more thing to help folks who stop their swing with a shotgun: I had a hard case and got him to move the muzzle by sending doubles from my trap. Hope this helps.

Adam
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  #15  
Old 11-06-2012, 09:34 PM
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fabsroman fabsroman is offline
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Gil,

Good luck. Just like anything, to fix a problem a person needs to admit that they have a problem. If after hitting 5 out of 75 clays, he does not think he has a problem, then there is nothing you can do for him. If he thinks it is the gun, he had better go get a professional to fit the gun to him.

All my guns are pretty much set up the same way. Granted, it helps to shoot only Benelli and Beretta with the adjustable shims.

I also don't believe in getting a new gun every year. Yeah, nice and shiny is wonderful, but tried and true is usually the way to go. Still shooting a 15 year old SBE for wing shooting and a 10 year old Beretta Teknys for a lot of clays.

Simply put, if he thinks it is the new gun and possibly the fit, suggest he see a professional gun fitter for it. If he really cared about hitting the target, he would want an answer to the 70 misses. Some people are just out there shooting and hunting for the comraderie, and could care less about 70 misses.
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