Focus on the muzzle in your last video. I see it wavering quite a bit before and after hammer fall. Align it with the venetian blind slats to see it.
take up flint knapping! wife stepped on a shard of Obsidian and you would have thought i was killing baby seals! never marry a Scot.Hell hath no fury like a wife who gets a shard of flint in her foot from one of those "stinky old guns you like to shoot".
I had just knocked down half of pot #2 of coffee when I took that video... I was a jittery for sure. Maybe that's the issue?Focus on the muzzle in your last video. I see it wavering quite a bit before and after hammer fall. Align it with the venetian blind slats to see it.
I got a piece I'm chiseling down right now to make one.As I suggested, get a wooden "flint" and you won't be scattering flint shards all over the house.
Just fine. All shots on an 8" plate at 100 yards, except for the last shot which I put on the IPSC target. Unmentionable, but for all intents and purposes, let's consider it a P53 Enfield, since that's how it started life. I agree, as you and others have said, if it's not a flinch, it's gotta be a follow thru issue. I'm going to try a different shooting stance as well.I would say that if you can shoot a modern gun well offhand but not a flintlock you are not following through. Be sure and get a second sight picture after the gun fires. This will ensure that you stay on your sights during and after the shot.
I do think you nailed itI don't think you can tell what is wrong by dry firing , when dry firing there is no anticipated flash to upset you .
I suspect you are flinching and pulling the trigger hard , which moves the barrel to the right .
I personally don't like the way you hold the forend , or in fact don't hold the forend .
I think balancing the rifle on your palm is not a secure way to hold your rifle ,same with resting your arm on your gut It can and will move .
It may work for indoor target shooting with a glove and sling but , in my experience not for long firearms , the relatively slow lock time , compared with what you are used to, may also be a factor , you must learn to follow through .
That long barrel sticking out unsupported is a wind vane and also develops momentum , if it starts to move it has to be stopped and brought back on target , without going back through the target .
I had just knocked down half of pot #2 of coffee when I took that video... I was a jittery for sure. Maybe that's the issue?
It sure would be an issue with me!
I got a piece I'm chiseling down right now to make one.
Just fine. All shots on an 8" plate at 100 yards, except for the last shot which I put on the IPSC target. Unmentionable, but for all intents and purposes, let's consider it a P53 Enfield, since that's how it started life. I agree, as you and others have said, if it's not a flinch, it's gotta be a follow thru issue. I'm going to try a different shooting stance as well.
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That's good shooting and we could hear each hit on the plate. We'll forgive you for shooting an unmentionable since it started life as a muzzleloader and you are showing us you can shoot. Now let's see the same results with the flint gun.
I had just knocked down half of pot #2 of coffee when I took that video... I was a jittery for sure. Maybe that's the issue?
It sure would be an issue with me!
Caffeine withdrawal is a real thing and can give one headaches and shakes for several days until all the body adjusts , it also has a diuretic effect and causes one to dehydrate faster .Summer 1975 and I'm the Junior Armorer on THE Marine Corps Rifle Team, which meant an important part of my job was to ensure the 55 cup coffee maker was ready with fresh coffee when the first shooter showed up each morning and keep making coffee all day long. About three weeks later, our Team Captain had been reading caffeine was no good for shooting, so he ordered us not to make coffee and have it available at all times on the side of the Ordnance Van. So what happened?
The shooters' scores went right into the waste bucket and did not come back until the Team Captain gave up and went back to having coffee all day long !!!
The big thing is not to go well over or well under one's normal consumption of caffeine.
Gus
Firearms shoot away from hard surfaces . If I shoot off a bag I put my left hand on the bag and my right on the grip , the butt never touches anything other than my shoulder , so the rifle is only touching me , That way the effect on recoil /muzzle jump is almost the same as when shooting off hand , just steadier .Technique looks fine. I'd bet you don't have your sandbags as far back as you support hand is when shooting offhand. Try benching it with bags back where you support the rifle when offhand shooting, and see where the group lands.
I made this video hoping to show you guys what I'm doing, and see if anyone can help me out here... I'm at the point of losing sleep over this now. Any, and all help, is greatly appreciated. Help me shoot better!
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