Equipment
Here is an old picture of the rifle:
The rifle is a BAT SB Left-Left action with a Krieger barrel, a Jewell trigger and a Kelbly HCFB stock. The Weaver T-36 scope in the picture has been replaced with a Weaver XR T-36. The huge recoil pad is gone. With the side focus of the XR T-36, I can adjust for parallax without assistance.
Russ Haydon put the rifle together for me with the understanding that I was not serious about competition but just wanted a very accurate Varmint rifle that I could shoot off a bench at the club or a portable bench in the field. This makes more sense if you understand I am a 68 year old disabled guy rather new to shooting, who cannot off-hand a rifle. My right hand and arm are no help in any part of the shooting process. I just need to keep them out of the way. It was with that understanding that we selected the specific components. Then, when I met a few competitors, I got sucked into trying my hand at competition. I could be cynical and assume they just need someone to hold down last place at the competitions up-coming this year but I am not that cynical.
I am still using the same rear bag in the picture, but I bought an SEB NEO last year for a front rest. The SEB is smooth, fast and stable, so I have no excuses there. I am now loading with an arbor press Russ Haydon modified for me, Wilson hand dies, an RCBS hand primer and an RCBS ChargeMaster 1500 scale and dispenser. With my rifle, BR setup and my home made loads, I have frequently made 100-yard, 5-shot groups that look like this:
and this:
You will notice those were in calm wind conditions and that they are at 100 yards. Now moving out to 200 yards, loading at the range and learning to read the flags in windy conditions has upped the level of difficulty several magnitudes. No problem. It gets me to drag my old bones out of the house and gives me something new to learn. As the old guy in the Monty Python movie once said, "I don't want to go on the cart." "I'm not dead yet."
Did I say, "no problem." I mean it. Sure I grumble. It doesn't mean anything. If I seem to ask a lot of questions, that is how I learned nearly everything I know. Ask and listen to the answers...what a concept. If sometimes I seem to be asking the same question again, it is because I am not sure I understood the answers I got the first time.