Who Needs A Rifle? The Walker At 100 Yards

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Interesting video on long-range shooting here. Good information on bullets, loads and loading.

I recall decades ago, when I received my first professional handgun training, the instructors demonstrating how easy it was to hit a man-sized target at 100 yards. At that time they did it not only to show us how easy it was to repeatedly hit the target at that range, but also how easy it would be for you to get hit at that range. They were using .38 revolvers and one instructor put six rounds center mass over his shoulder (using a mirror) at 100 yds. So, this is eminently practical, with practice.

 
I get amazed at how many folks seem to think 100 yards is equivalent to a half a mile. It's 300 feet. I've personally dropped jackrabbits at 130 yards with a pistol. Not a big deal.
Me shooting a pistol at a hundred yards would be the equivalent of half a mile😊
 
I once saw a friend hit a shaving cream can with a 44 magnum at 75 yards. He never managed to hit ANYTHING with it again.
There is a you tube video of two guys one shooting a .58 enfield and the other a bess. Ten shots at three hundred yards at a man sized target.
The enfield shot low and put them in the dirt for the dirt three shots, the rest were all hits but one or two
The Bess had dirt fly up all over, except one that was center of mass almost dead center
Bragging right the rest of his life
 
Even so, most are better 100 yard marksmen with long arms than with hand guns.
That is because they don't practice at 100 yard distances, isn't it?
I'm always surprised at people shooting or sighting in at 25 yards, that's a good distance to retreat from.

On horseback, two forces closing at a gallop, the time elapsed between the hundred yard shot and hand to hand contact would be 5-6 seconds. With a moving platform and a moving target, closing speeds of ~40mph, or ~58' per second, I imagine all hits to be more or less accidental. With each ~20 stride of the horse though the odds of getting a hit would increase.
 
That is because they don't practice at 100 yard distances, isn't it?
I'm always surprised at people shooting or sighting in at 25 yards, that's a good distance to retreat from.

On horseback, two forces closing at a gallop, the time elapsed between the hundred yard shot and hand to hand contact would be 5-6 seconds. With a moving platform and a moving target, closing speeds of ~40mph, or ~58' per second, I imagine all hits to be more or less accidental. With each ~20 stride of the horse though the odds of getting a hit would increase.
Well IF you're part of a line of horsemen charging, and so are "they" on the other side, maybe not the guy whom you were trying to hit, but quite possibly the horse or the guy near your target would be hit.

LD
 
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