Shooting between heart beats:
The average heat beat is what, 85 beats per second? That means you have .7 seconds to get the shot off?
Am I missing something. I don't believe you can control your heart beat, I don't think its reasonable to expect to get each and ever shot off in .7 seconds with any type of accuracy.
However I do believe, or I do KNOW you can work around it. Look at High Power shooters, or better yet, the most precision shooters out there, ISU or international shooting union, do.
The have a shooting jacket, under that shooting jacket is two or more sweatshirts that dampen the impact of your heart beat.
Breathing as I mentioned in another matter. You shoot at the longest dead spot, that normally is the bottom of the breath cycle or as you let your breath out before you take in the next breath DO NOT HOLD YOUR BREATH, breath naturally, you have plenty of time to get that shot off.
Simple enough to try, Get in a good position, aim your rifle at a given target and breath naturally while you watch your sight in relation to the target, see at what point the sight remains in one position the longest, you'll see that it is at the bottom of the breathing cycle.
Now all you have to do is adjust your position and natural point of aim until the sights are on during that bottom part of the cycle.
Close your eyes, breath a bit naturally, then open the eyes at the bottom of the cycle and see if you're still on target,
If not, adjust your position, not your breathing habits.
One of the most underrated aspects of marksmanship fundamentals is "relaxation" the more relaxed you are, the better you are going to be.
Worrying about breathing or heart beat (which is natural, we all do it) is a deterrent to being relaxed.
Again this is easy to see. Go to a rifle match, walk up and down the line and watch the shooters. Some flop around like a chicken with its head cut off, some are relaxed and don't seem to be moving at all. Look at the targets and see which ones have the best scores.
The best book you'll find on shooting is rather cheap at $6.95, its the Army Marksmanship Units (best shooters in the world) sold by the CMP. INTERNATIONAL RIFLE SHOOTING.
The CMP has several good books, but for pure marksmanship the International Rifle Shooting guide beats them all.
The average heat beat is what, 85 beats per second? That means you have .7 seconds to get the shot off?
Am I missing something. I don't believe you can control your heart beat, I don't think its reasonable to expect to get each and ever shot off in .7 seconds with any type of accuracy.
However I do believe, or I do KNOW you can work around it. Look at High Power shooters, or better yet, the most precision shooters out there, ISU or international shooting union, do.
The have a shooting jacket, under that shooting jacket is two or more sweatshirts that dampen the impact of your heart beat.
Breathing as I mentioned in another matter. You shoot at the longest dead spot, that normally is the bottom of the breath cycle or as you let your breath out before you take in the next breath DO NOT HOLD YOUR BREATH, breath naturally, you have plenty of time to get that shot off.
Simple enough to try, Get in a good position, aim your rifle at a given target and breath naturally while you watch your sight in relation to the target, see at what point the sight remains in one position the longest, you'll see that it is at the bottom of the breathing cycle.
Now all you have to do is adjust your position and natural point of aim until the sights are on during that bottom part of the cycle.
Close your eyes, breath a bit naturally, then open the eyes at the bottom of the cycle and see if you're still on target,
If not, adjust your position, not your breathing habits.
One of the most underrated aspects of marksmanship fundamentals is "relaxation" the more relaxed you are, the better you are going to be.
Worrying about breathing or heart beat (which is natural, we all do it) is a deterrent to being relaxed.
Again this is easy to see. Go to a rifle match, walk up and down the line and watch the shooters. Some flop around like a chicken with its head cut off, some are relaxed and don't seem to be moving at all. Look at the targets and see which ones have the best scores.
The best book you'll find on shooting is rather cheap at $6.95, its the Army Marksmanship Units (best shooters in the world) sold by the CMP. INTERNATIONAL RIFLE SHOOTING.
The CMP has several good books, but for pure marksmanship the International Rifle Shooting guide beats them all.