The second main reason why I bought a Blaser R8...
The second main reason why I bought a Blaser R8 is best illustrated by the two following pictures:
Blaser R8 with .223 Rem barrel, Swarovski Z3 4-12x50 with Ballistic Turret, Leica laser range finder 2000 B with EHR (Equivalent Horizontal Range) output; Bog Pod Adrenaline fully adjustable shooting sticks, 6" steel plate, 300 yards shooting lane. The perfect safari training combination?
I made a mistake for my first safari. You see, I had been shooting competitively .22 LR 50 meters Olympic Rifle 3 Positions and English Match since I was in my mid 20's; I went through regimental sniper training with the French army in Germany; I have been hunting for 40+ years; I took up long distance (600 to 1,000 meters) steel plates shooting when I moved to the US 30 years ago; etc. I know how to shoot, and I do not need shooting practice to go on safari, right? WRONG!
It was not until I took my first shot in Africa that I realized I had never shot standing off the sticks. All my military training was prone on bipod; most of my .22 LR training was prone or kneeling - there is no standing stage in English Match, and only one stage standing in Rifle 3 Positions and it is off-hand; and most of my hunting involved mid to semi-long range shots leaning on something (rocks in the Alps, trees or stumps in America & Canada) or off-hand close range shots at running game in Europe. I had never practiced mid to long range shots standing off the sticks. Guess what? It showed... I was lucky that we collected all animals I shot, and using the big .340 Wby likely helped on some marginal shots, but I was not really proud of my shooting...
Since then, I have been fanatic about shooting standing off the sticks every weekend for months prior to going on safari, and this is the second main reason why I bought a Blaser R8: realistic training.
Realistic training - I have advocated on this blog shooting 5,000 rounds of .22 LR at a 6" steel plate at 150 yards with a quality, adult-size, .22 LR bolt rifle (Winchester 52, Remington 541T, Anschutz 14xx or 17xx series, Walther KKJ, CZ 452 and 457, etc.) before boarding the plane for Africa. I stand by this recommendation. Although I own both an Anschutz 1416 and a Walther KKJ, my favorite training rifle had been a heftier Winchester 52 with Zeiss glass. It approximated better the Mark V or CZ 550 I used in Africa.
Why a 6” steel plate? Because aside from the Tiny Ten, anything in Africa has a bigger vital area, and hitting a 6” vital area at 150 yards requires the same skills as hitting a 12” vital area at 300 yards.
Why 150 yards? Because this is about as far as practice .22 LR will go without arcing and dispersing too much.
Why .22 LR? because 500 rounds of Thunderbolt cost the same price as 8 rounds of .300 Wby…
Blaser were smart enough to recognize the training need and they provide a .22 LR conversion kit for the R8. At $1,400 public price for just a barrel, magazine insert and bolt head, this is obviously not a .22 LR designed for kids. Clearly this is intended for adult practice. Smart!
Full size .22 LR Winchester 52, home made tripod sticks, 6" plate, 150 yards shooting lane. Great - infinitely better than none! - but imperfect safari training combination.
Weight, ergonomics, trigger, cheek position, manual of arms, etc. - The first problem with practicing a lot with a firearm different from the one actually used for hunting, is that we unconsciously acquire muscle memories with the weight, ergonomics, trigger, cheek position, manual of arms, etc. of the trainer. These do not translate directly to the hunting rifle. This is a weakness...
Therefore, from day one, I fully intended to buy a .22 LR R8 conversion…
But I did not…
Range - The second problem with .22 LR training is that you can stretch the range to 150 yards, but not much past it. To go from 100 to 150 yards with the Remington Thunderbolt ammo, I already need to click 4.5 MOA of correction. This is true rainbow trajectory, and if there is wind all bets are off. I tried 200 yards with the .22 LR. This is not really practical.
Besides, after bricks upon bricks of .22 Thunderbolt, the 6" plate at 150 yards has become fairly easy to hit...
So... upon long and careful consideration, I decided to NOT buy the Blaser .22 LR conversion, but to buy instead, for the same price, a fourth barrel & magazine insert (and a second bolt head) in .223 Rem.
This is one of the smartest decisions I made with the R8...
This added all-ranges (up to 400+ yards) training to my regimen.
Sure, .223. ammo is more expensive than .22 LR ($0.39 per shot vs. $0.06 per shot) but 1,000 rounds bulk of Federal American Eagle 55 Grain FMJ only cost $390, and $0.39 per shot is still ten times cheaper than $3.85 per shot .300 Wby. This works for me...
How does this work? - I promptly removed the short stroke bolt stop on the .223 Rem magazine insert so that I would always practice the same long stroke as required with the .300 Wby and .375 H&H magazines, and I started shooting...
Boy, did I continue to learn!
1) I completely changed my stance behind the tripod. I knew that resting the rifle on the tripod and standing behind it was good to stabilize the crosshair in the 6" plate at 150 yards. Guess what? It sure does not work at 300 yards! Instead of placing 1 tripod leg forward and standing between the two rear legs, I now place two tripod legs forward and spread my legs on each side of the rear tripod leg, and I lean heavily into the tripod - the same way you would "load the bipod" leaning forward into it with a sniper rifle. This considerably steadies the crosshair.
2) I rediscovered the importance of EHR (Equivalent Horizontal Range). Sure, the .223 flies flat, but not all that flat. To go from 100 yards to 300 yards still requires 3.5 MOA of correction, and past 200 yards every click counts. I calibrated the Swarovski Z3 ballistic turrets to the 55 gr load and initially experienced frustration with unexplained misses at 200 to 300 yards during the first sessions. Then it re-dawned on me. I shoot at 7,000 ft. elevation. Duuuhhhh! I quickly changed the Leica laser range finder setting to calculate EHR based on atmospheric pressure (and angle of shot - although this does not apply during my training as I shoot more or less horizontally) and a 200 yards distance became a 190 yards EHR, a 300 yards distance became a 280 yards EHR, etc. The plate started to ring...
3) The fundamentals, the fundamentals, the fundamentals !!! Proper stance, respiration control, heartbeats control, body sway control (i.e. "load the tripod"), trigger control, etc. 150 yards forgive many sins. 300 yards do not...
The results are amazing. Earlier this week, Wednesday before Thanksgiving, I went shooting (I am lucky that where I live in Arizona this only involves a 10 minutes trail ride to my favorite secret spot on public land). At 200, 250 and 300 yards, standing off the sticks, I hit the 6" plate 83% or the time: 25 hits for 30 shots. Misses were evenly distributed between the various distances, indicating shooting form errors rather. I need to continue practicing...
Do yourself a favor, if you live East and can only shoot 100 yards regularly, get the R8 .22 LR conversion. If you live further West and can shoot 300 yards regularly, get a R8 .223 Rem barrel. This will change your life...
A couple turns on the Blaser R8 barrel Allen Key and a quick bolt and magazine insert change to install in turn the .257 Wby then the .300 Wby barrels, and 3 shots from each confirm that the 30 to 50 rounds per session 300 yards training with the .223 Rem barrel directly and flawlessly transfers to the hunting calibers. Happiness!