Ok all! I'll be attaching some pictures and videos my wife took today.
Did you observe any recoil relief with the change of body position and hold? Is still only occasional donkey punches to the face?
Ok all! I'll be attaching some pictures and videos my wife took today.
I'll need to wait till I get home to format the slow motiondHere are the pictures
I did! It actually only bit me twice, which I fortunately have slow motion of!Did you observe any recoil relief with the change of body position and hold? Is still only occasional donkey punches to the face?
I'm 90% sure it's me, not the rifle, and don't worry about the legs. I've seen worse lolI am with rookhawk on this one, shooting form is likely the issue
I do not pretend to be an expert, Eventually_Africa_Again, but a well handled double rifle of any caliber up to .500 NE should have very little raise under recoil from the sticks.
For example, here is a quick video of myself shooting my .470 with 500 gr full loads.
Because I am on the sticks, in order to lean on them my left foot is not as far forward as it would be off hand, but you can see that I do lean and "hunch" forward on the rifle, even though I do not have a deep cheek weld because I am using a red dot on it (old eyes!).
The real secret on high recoil rifles, as rookhawk mentioned is to really hold them tight so that they have no room to hit and all they can do is push.
IMG_4496.MOV
drive.google.com
Pretty accurate shooting can be done this way, even with the big bores. For example, here is the 50 yard group I was shooting that day, testing a new batch of Norma PH Woodleigh solids. 3 pairs of right/left grouped in 2" at 50 yards, left barrel on left side, right barrel on right side - the credit goes to the rifle, with each barrel shooting approximately 1" - the credit goes to shooting form. 3 clicks left on the Leica Tempus red dot (1.1 MOA each, i.e. 0.55" each @ 50 yards) brought the group dead center...
View attachment 402549
Apologies for the white chicken legs, it has been a long COVID confinement
Agree. Fit is everything. I bought a new 470 NE with the wrong LOP and too light and it kicked me to death. I got measured then bought a new 450-400 at the right weight and the DR shoots like a dream. I fired 17 shots just yesterday and absolutely a pleasure to shootIf it is jumping you almost certainly have too much drop and possibly the pitch is off. A double
Rifle shoots like a shotgun, fit is critical. If the fit is off you are going to hate it. Fit on a scoped rifle is important but nearly as critical. There are some good gun fitters in the US. My buddy at H&H is one of the best if you ever find your way to London.
1+ on One Days commentI shall respectfully disagree
The pistol grip shape allows for a solid grasp of the shooting hand, which avoids the painful issue of hitting the trigger guard with the second finger, and the drop at the heel is designed to allow lining the eye low on the barrel iron sights.
I have shot extensively Chapuis doubles in European and African calibers, and they are well proportioned
Here are the pictures
Here is your answer
Observe the difference in our backs: your leans backward, mine leans forward.
As shown in the video, when shooting off the sticks, this prevents the rifle from jumping up and kicking, even though a full load .470 recoils considerably more than a .450/.400.
The proper "load" on the sticks, leaning forward onto them, is that if someone was swiping them away, you would fall forward...
View attachment 402555 View attachment 402556
IMG_4496.MOV
drive.google.com