Eric Krewson said:
Well, I have to retract my statement on how accurate my smoothie is. I shot my fowler with the new rear sight yesterday. I could see the sight really well but my fowler was spraying balls all over the place. I had two fliers out of 10 shots, my normal 3" group opened to 6", not counting the fliers.
Dang, just when I thought I had this smoothbore stuff figured out........
It's like with wimmin - when you think you have The Rules figured out they change them.
My Bess was that way. I'd get past 50 yards and I swear the balls would jink and swerve like knuckle balls. My Brooks reaches to 60 yards, but I don't trust it past that.
What lube are you using, Eric? I have found less to be best in my smoothies. Pressure? Tightness? Not sure why but too slick is not good.
Earlier I introduced pointing vs. aiming. I do better pointing if there is no rear sight - which is the same method I use for bowhunting. And I shoot a hunting bow daily. No sights, just focus on the target. On a specific spot on the target, on a tiny point within the specific spot on the target. Right eye does windage and left eye does elevation - without me thinking about it.
With a shotgun when I grouse hunt I concentrate on the beak. Usually can't see it - but I know where it ought to be and with enough leade to get the shot and the beak to intersect. On a deer I concentrate for an imaginary bead resting on top of the heart. Even with sights you must pick a spot, without sights it's even more critical.
It's true - you can't be as accurate without sights. But you can be faster and accurate enough. The goal is 10" in diameter (heart/lungs). But you don't aim at a 10" circle. You aim for the center of the 10" circle.
I have an old book by Jack O'Connor (famous as a rifle shot) and he devotes half the book to shotgun shooting. And he states that a good rifleman is not necessarily a good shotgunner and vice versa. It's a different skill set.
Shotgunning (even if only one ball is launched) is like throwing a dart or hammering a nail. Muscle training by repetition.