I was going to say the one in the yellow shirt - because he is definitely compensating for something! (Maybe windage?).However, the guy on the extreme right reminds me of Will Smith holding his "cricket" in Men in Black.Anyway, awesome pic.Remind me to show you my gun collection some time.
1997 Civic EX sedan w/auto trans2001 Accord EX sedan w/5-spd manual2009 Vibe 2.4L w/5-spd manual, sunroof, monsoon, GT spoiler, Magnaflow muffler and rolled SS tip, lowered on H-Tech springs, window tint, debadged (save the red arrow!).
Quote, originally posted by BlueCrush »The one in the GenVibe T-shirt...lol. Are those really all BB-guns? Well, sort of. They are competitors in a sport called airgun field target.... VERY accurate pellet rifles. Maybe $2-4k to play at the top level. Not your usual BB guns.
Quote, originally posted by Kincaid »I was going to say the one in the yellow shirt - because he is definitely compensating for something! (Maybe windage?). Not at all.... standard fare for the sport. Shoot from a sitting position, nothing can support the gun except you. 55 yards, put a pellet through a 1" hole. 10 yards, .25" hole. Everything in between. The difficulty can't be imagined until you try it. All the gizmos on that Yellow Guy's gun are purely functional. The scope on it alone was probably close to a grand. BB guns have progressed.
Quote, originally posted by star_deceiver »How far do they shoot? (accuratly) 100 yards or so bench rested. Wind is more of a factor than distance.A recent competition in CA., bench rested in some gusting wind, had a winner of .190 ctc 3 shot group @50 yards.
I was watching Top Shot on cable the other day - I was surprised how much compensation was needed due to a light wind, and that was with rifle bullets.
1997 Civic EX sedan w/auto trans2001 Accord EX sedan w/5-spd manual2009 Vibe 2.4L w/5-spd manual, sunroof, monsoon, GT spoiler, Magnaflow muffler and rolled SS tip, lowered on H-Tech springs, window tint, debadged (save the red arrow!).