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Info

 Applications for a Firearms Certificate

In order for you to apply for a Firearms Certificate, you would need to fulfil the following criteria, as a minimum:

  • Be a full member of an authorised rifle club

  • Police checks will be undertaken, which include criminal records /DVLA /Domestic /WOA /Medical records /and associated databases

  • Applicants will be visited by the firearms enquiry officer to check your character and the security arrangements for firearms

  • Applicants must have two references including one professional person

The possession of firearms and ammunition in Great Britain is regulated mainly by:

Guidance and good practice:

Detail Orders 'that is you moving from the club room to the gallery?'
  • ALL LIGHTS ARE ON IN THE GALLERY​

    • Once CALLED FORWARD to shoot do so promptly, you are now the range DETAIL

    • Jacket and Sling on, glove ready, ear protection

    • Go to your lane in the range

  • SETUP, matt/spotting scope/ammo/etc - make sure you have everything, collect your Racked gun

    • Moving with muzzle up proceed to your agreed lane position​

  • ALL 'COMMANDS' AND INSTRUCTIONS SHOULD ONLY COME FROM THE RANGE CONDUCT OFFICER (RCO)​

  • DETAIL 'GET READY'

    • Pointing your unloaded gun to the RIGHT far corner of the Range Butts is SAFE

    • Shooters 'GO FORWARD' to present their targets (placing them on the pegs in line with the correct lane)

    • There should only be 'Shooters and an RCO present'

    • RCO will CLOSE the DOOR 

    • Quiet Please, NO talking in the gallery!

    • If you have a problem (Hang Fire/Squib/etc) RAISE YOUR ARM (be clear) - DO NOT MOVE - WAIT AND HOLD YOUR POSITION​

  • IF THE RCO CALLS 'STOP' you stop and unload, replacing your breech flag, only move if they say move​

  • IF THE LIGHTS ARE SWITCHED ON as above, you 'STOP' and unload, replacing your breech flag, only move if the RCO says move​

  • DETAIL 'ARE YOU READY' when you are ready, look towards the RCO

    • When all are looking to the RCO and ONLY when all are ready​​

  • DETAIL ‘GET READY TO SHOOT' link up with the gun and get comfortable, indicate to the RCO you are ready by removing your breech flag

    • Keep your finger OFF THE TRIGGER

    • NO ROUNDS IN THE CHAMBER​

  • DETAIL ‘LIGHTS OFF' lights are switched to RED, period of the final check is given by the RCO​​

  • DETAIL 'SHOOT WHEN READY' Load and proceed to SHOOT

    • Do not look to your spotting scope with the breech closed

    • Shoot your 'Spotters' and 'Targets' at WILL **THERE IS NO RACE**

    • Once you have completed WAIT, HOLD YOUR POSITION, replace your breech flag, point to SAFE

    • The RCO will check that the DETAIL is complete by viewing ALL breech flags in position​​

  • DETAIL 'LIGHTS ON'

    • Stand Easy

    • One person is nominated to 'GO FORWARD' to collect all the targets - if you are nominated please say to the remaining DETAIL 'Going Forward'

    • Remaining DETAIL clear the range

    • Do not dither as others are awaiting, leave it as you found it?

    • Collect spent cases placing them in the bucket provided

    • Pass the shot targets to the Desk person for 'SCORING' and 'ADJUDICATION' - rejoice over your POSSIBLE :-)​​

    • RACK your guns as before, let them cool

Further range information links...

Range Safety Officers Handbook
Incident Accident Firearm Ammunition Report Form
How to Handle a Gunshot Wound apologies, but somethings must be know
Know your First Aid Kit
Eyes Glasses and Lenses

Rifle and Pistol lenses are very different as is the sighting principle...

With a pistol, the aim is more an area aim and the lens will be whatever is necessary for you to get sharp focus on the foresight, the top shooting specific Opticians work on a focal length of 1.3 mts, when shooting pistol seriously always take your pistol to the optician and they will get it exactly spot on, (please ask their permission first?)


As it's an area aim the target blur is irrelevant, the aiming mark is just to give related to the centre, you do not aim at it, and you do not want to be tempted to try and focus on it, If you can see the target clear then you are not focusing on the sight picture and you will get a bigger error from a misaligned sight picture than any wobble or placement of the sight picture against the target.
An iris merely complicates the focus, as it draws the focal length back out towards the target, the few shooters who shoot well with an iris have their focal lens set up with the iris, but really it's a complication most good shooters have tried and rejected, therefore its best avoided.

Now rifle shooting is a different kettle of fish, you are looking through an aperture (which changes your focus), the point is to get a sharp focus on the foresight, and a good enough view of the aiming mark, which is at infinity, as we are talking of a very precise aim to achieve the top score, so we have now two focal lengths that we need to gain focus on at the same time in a perfect world, and that is impossible with the human eye so we work on the best compromise, or do we (retina Retention is good and bad, brain trickery?)

The accepted and taught technique is to have the foresight in sharp focus, it's the bit we move and control to achieve the good shot, the aiming mark is fixed, and we judge the white gap in the foresight a round the aiming mark, as long as we have a good enough "view" of that aiming mark and we see it as around space, we can achieve a perfect aim.

If your focus goes to the aiming mark you are building Retention, for some, this is doom as you will lose the precision of the equal ring of white around the foresight element, for others, it's black ring black ring - bang 10.9

The compromise focal length is 2 mts and that relates to a +0.5 diopter correction on long vision, so if your long current prescription is +1.5 your shooting prescription is +2.00. Beware to do the correct maths if you have a minus prescription i.e. -1.5 your shooting prescription is -1.0.


Although there are some simple possible answers, it's a complex subject, our eyesight is valuable and critical to us, and it is always best to talk to a qualified optician, and ideally one who is experienced in the foibles of shooting vision. Good Luck

Eyecup from INTERSHOOT
Gehmann Lens Holder 501
Shot Group Analysis.png
How to Eliminate Parallax in a Riflescope
 

Any riflescope has two functional optical components: The eyepiece and everything else. The “everything else” is the scope forward of the power adjustment ring. As the image enters the scope through the objective lens, it is manipulated, focused, and dumped into the first focal plane located right underneath the turrets. The erector assembly takes the image, magnifies it, and focuses it into the second focal plane located at the power-­adjustment ring. The eyepiece works like a microscope and allows the shooter’s eye to see what’s in the second focal plane.

There are two optical components that need to be focused together to totally eliminate parallax. The first is the image coming onto the scope. This is easy to do because all it requires is looking through the scope while turning the side-­focus turret until the image is tack-­sharp. Once that image is in focus, it is perfectly located in the second focal plane, where the eyepiece is ready for it.

 

Most of us have learned that one of the first steps in setting up a scope involves focusing the reticle. Point the scope at a light-­colored background, look at the reticle for 2 to ­3 seconds and then look away. Next, turn the diopter a half-­turn and then look at the reticle for another 2 to 3 seconds. This part is just like an eye test. If the reticle gets sharper, keep going in that direction until it is as sharp as possible. If the reticle becomes fuzzier, turn the diopter in the opposite direction.

 

Never stare at the reticle while turning the diopter. The human eye tries to focus on whatever is in front of it, so as the reticle’s focus is changing, so is the eye. Staring at the reticle while adjusting its focus results in a poorly set-­up and out-­of-­focus optic.

The number one cause of parallax in a scope is improper or incomplete reticle focus. When the reticle isn’t in focus, this means the eyepiece is looking either in front of or behind the second focal plane for the incoming image. The reality is that it needs to be looking precisely at the second focal plane.

An indicator that there is still some parallax error in any riflescope is the difficulty of knowing when the reticle is most in focus. The ability to spin the diopter a half-­turn and see no change in reticle focus likely means there will be parallax in the scope with the resulting wandering zero. The good news is getting that last little bit of parallax out of the scope and eliminating a wandering zero is not overly difficult. Start by focusing the reticle as described above. Point the scope at a neutral background, look at the reticle for a few seconds, look away, and adjust the diopter. Repeat until the reticle is in focus.

Now it’s time for step two. Put up a target with a clearly defined and small aiming point. A 1-­inch orange or bright yellow dot on a piece of cardboard (or Hornady’s peel-­and-­stick target) work nicely. Use the side-­focus knob to get the target ­sharp. Bag the gun in place so it stays on target without any human support. Without putting your face on the stock, look through the scope and move your head up and down and side to side. If there is no reticle movement relative to the target, there is no parallax in the scope. If there is reticle movement, make a 1⁄8-­ to 1/4-­turn adjustment of the diopter and perform the side-­to-­side and up-­and-­down head movement again. Continue to make small adjustments to the diopter until there is no reticle movement, even when you move your head around behind the scope.

It should require no more than two full revolutions of the diopter to eliminate the parallax using this supplementary method. If you find yourself struggling to eliminate that last tiniest bit of reticle movement, know that some scopes will have a small amount of parallax no matter what you do. I teach a handful of precision rifle courses a year, and out of 10 students, one or two will always have some parallax, even with both myself and the student working with the scope. That statistic covers what I’d call “professional-­grade” scopes. Any optic made in the Philippines or China will have a much higher incidence of permanent parallax. Go ahead and get mad at me, but that’s the facts.

Performing small focus changes to the diopter while keeping the target image in-­focus is the best way to get both target and reticle focused simultaneously. Once both focal planes align, there is no parallax in the system, so variations in head placement will not cause the point of impact to move. Any shooter that takes the time to do the above will likely see slightly smaller groups because he’s successfully eliminated one more variable from the shooting equation.

Of course, this is all just mumbo jumbo without a way to check. The check is simple and requires 20 rounds and a 100-­yard range. Before using the above process, put 10 1-­inch dots on a piece of paper and put the target up at 100 yards. Get into a good shooting position from the prone or shooting bench and fire one round at the first dot. Stand up and come completely off the rifle, then get back behind the rifle, move to the second dot, and fire one round. Repeat this process until you’ve shot one round at all 10 dots.

 

Go through the steps outlined above to eliminate all parallax and then conduct the drill a second time. You’ll find the rounds land more often in the same relative location than before. Overlaying all the round impacts will also show a smaller composite

© 2019 by SHRIVENHAM SMALLBORE CLUB.

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