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kilogulf59 (Ken)
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 Dead-on Shooting Tips from a Combat Sniper
« Thread Started on Aug 16, 2007, 7:43am »


Having read this fine article several times I thought it would be of both interest and value to the ICCF membership.

Taken from the ARMY.COM website and reproduced here with Lt. Col. Roberts' kind permission.

Thank you Col. Roberts and I am sure all will find this as useful as I did.

Dead-on Shooting Tips from a Combat Sniper
By Craig Roberts


There is one word that every rifle shooter should know: BRASS. It is a word I learned many years ago as a young US Marine rifleman, and later a Marine sniper. If you learn this word and what each letter in the acronym means, and then apply them to every shot, you can’t miss.

BRASS stands for five words: Breath, Relax, Aim, Slack and Squeeze. Basically, used in the order presented above, you do each step prior to making your shot. Here is what you do:

Breathe: You are in position; you have your target selected and in range and you raise your rifle to your eye. You take a fairly deep breath, exhale it, then take in a half breath and hold it. This does two things: it enriches your blood with oxygen which helps steady your aim, and it gives you more of a steady rest since you are not breathing while taking the shot.

Relax: Perhaps one of the more difficult parts of the sequence, especially if it’s that big buck or predator that you’ve been waiting for all morning. This is the part where adrenalin is beginning to affect your hold, position, and timing—and might make you rush the shot. By concentrating on relaxing, you will notice your sights or crosshairs begin to settle down and not do the “figure eight dance” so much.

Aim: As soon as you are as relaxed as the situation allows, you concentrate on sight alignment. If you are shooting iron sights, you know that you have to have that front sight blade locked on the six 0’clock position of your target and your rear sight positioned correctly with equal light on both sides of the front sight blade. Your rear sight should be a bit blurry, with a good clear and crisp front sight blade. Do NOT try to focus on the front sight and the target at the same time. The target should also be a bit blurry. It’s the front sight that counts in accuracy. When shooting a scoped rifle, make sure you have a clear view of the target and the crosshairs with no half-moon shadows on the sides or top of your scope lens. The scope picture should be round and clear and bright. If you have an AO—an adjustable objective lens—you can adjust your parallax and your focus ring so that your crosshairs are clear and sharp and so is your target. And make sure you have the proper eye relief behind the scope so that if your rifle recoils you do not end up with half-circle cuts in your forehead! Part of aiming is also proper grip. There are different schools of thought, but when I shoot from a rest or bipod position, I use my left (non-trigger) hand to support the heel of the stock in my shoulder and pull slightly back into my shoulder with my right hand at the small of the stock. Do not “over grip” as this will produce shaking or unsteadiness due to fatigue.

Slack: This is where you take up the slack on the trigger. Be sure you are very familiar with the feel of your rifle. Every rifle is different, and each one has a different trigger feel and pull. Use the pad on the tip of your finger only. As our old USMC shooting instructors would say, “stroke it gently…feel the slack taken up—then stop.”
Once you know your trigger feel and how much slack there is, you are ready for the hardest part of the shot sequence, the “squeeze.”

Squeeze: The most critical part of your shot is the last ½ second. It is the part when you launch that projectile down range and will either hit your target—or miss. Most of the instructing I do with shooters focuses on the last bit of trigger squeeze, and that’s where most make their mistakes. The bottom line is that the shot must be a surprise. You should not know exactly when it is going to happen, or try to anticipate it. If you do, you may flinch, jerk, or buck. Flinching normally causes the shooter to close his or her eyes at the last second—a sure miss. Bucking is shoving your shoulder into the rifle unconsciously in anticipation of the recoil. Jerking is “pulling” the trigger instead of squeezing it. Bucking will throw a shot to the left, while jerking will throw it to the right. If you are lining up a prairie dog at 800 yards, you have no room to buck, jerk, or flinch. You’ll miss the guy by a yard!
Remember BRASS, practice it, and you’re shots will find their target.

Craig Roberts is a contributing author to Predator & Prey Magazine. He also teaches sniper and countersniper courses to military and police groups. He served in Vietnam as a Marine sniper in 1966, and later as a police sniper with the Tulsa Police Department’s Tactical Squad. His books include “One Shot—One Kill: America’s Combat Snipers,” and “Crosshairs on the Kill Zone.” His home page is www.riflewarrior.com.
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 Re: Dead-on Shooting Tips from a Combat Sniper
« Reply #1 on Aug 16, 2007, 8:58am »

Good stuff; thanks for posting it!

I regularly neglect to do all five of the things listed in this post. ::)

It's amazing how easy this stuff is to do wrong, especially the "relax" and "squeeze" parts.
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kilogulf59 (Ken)
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 Re: Dead-on Shooting Tips from a Combat Sniper
« Reply #2 on Aug 17, 2007, 4:52am »


Tell me about it Matt...me too.

Remember though that these are techniques for precision type shooting, not for close-combat work. One does need to know both, especially where a rifle or carbine is concerned.
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 Re: Dead-on Shooting Tips from a Combat Sniper
« Reply #3 on Aug 21, 2007, 5:11am »


Odd, for some reason I thought this post would've generated more responce?
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 Re: Dead-on Shooting Tips from a Combat Sniper
« Reply #4 on Aug 21, 2007, 7:31am »

Hey Ken,

I find that if I go without practice for a few days, either hot or dryfire, that my squeeze suffers. Now, if I go to the range after a few days off practice, I'll spend a few minutes dryfiring there and maybe even start my session with some .22 bullseye shooting to get back in the groove.

Good article.

Mike
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kilogulf59 (Ken)
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 Re: Dead-on Shooting Tips from a Combat Sniper
« Reply #5 on Aug 22, 2007, 7:44am »


I hear ya Mike.

I spend my (limited) time "playing" out back instead of training properly. This I feel shows a lack of self-discipline of my part.

There's more than a few reasons for this, which I wont go into, however it is very foolish on my part.

Dry-fire and the .22, be it pistol, revolver, or rifle, are great ways to train...you're spot on with that Mike. Kudos to you sir....
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 Re: Dead-on Shooting Tips from a Combat Sniper
« Reply #6 on Aug 25, 2007, 6:16am »

I hate to disagree with an expert but I believe that trigger control does not need to be a surprise when it goes off. In fact I think knowing when the gun will go off is essential in accurate long range shooting.

Jim
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kilogulf59 (Ken)
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 Re: Dead-on Shooting Tips from a Combat Sniper
« Reply #7 on Aug 25, 2007, 6:35am »



Quote:
I hate to disagree with an expert but I believe that trigger control does not need to be a surprise when it goes off. In fact I think knowing when the gun will go off is essential in accurate long range shooting.


You know Jim, I tend to agree with you. I always assumed the surprise factor was for rookies. Once a fella knows his weapon, he'll also know exactly when the shot is coming off...this, for me, is especially true when firing a rifle.
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 Re: Dead-on Shooting Tips from a Combat Sniper
« Reply #8 on Aug 25, 2007, 7:13am »

It is essential when shooting at moving targets. Being a old time varmit hunter we sometimes had to lead and shoot at the moving quarry. Be it a whistle pig at 400 yds or a black bird or crow at 50 yds knowing when the gun would go off was necessary. I agree with you I think it is a newcommer need.

Jim
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 Re: Dead-on Shooting Tips from a Combat Sniper
« Reply #9 on Mar 12, 2008, 4:43pm »

Nice article. Thanks. I will remember BRASS.
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