How many shots before you start to fade?

How many rounds do you fire in a range session before you start to fade?

  • 5 rounds

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • 10 rounds

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • 20 rounds

    Votes: 4 3.5%
  • 50 rounds

    Votes: 10 8.8%
  • 100 rounds

    Votes: 23 20.2%
  • 150 rounds

    Votes: 19 16.7%
  • 200 rounds

    Votes: 23 20.2%
  • 300 rounds

    Votes: 11 9.6%
  • 400 rounds

    Votes: 5 4.4%
  • 500 rounds

    Votes: 2 1.8%
  • More than 500 rounds

    Votes: 7 6.1%
  • My shooting ability doesn't fade

    Votes: 10 8.8%

  • Total voters
    114
Status
Not open for further replies.
Joined
Dec 28, 2002
Messages
207
How many rounds do you fire in a range session before you notice that your shooting is not as good as it was earlier in the session?
 
I start to feel fatigue and fall off a bit somewhere between 100-250 rounds depending upon the caliber and how tired/energetic I was when I started (I voted 100 since I usually go shooting in the evening after work when I don't have the most energy in the world).
 
Depends on the caliber...

I can knock out 500rds of .22lr in one range session with no problems but at the same time, a box of 240gr .44 magnum is enough to get me sore after that my groups start to change.
 
It depends on the cartridge. .22 LR I can shoot practically all day without tiring. .357 magnum OTOH, tends to tire me out after only 50-100 shots.

I've shot 300 rounds of .45 ACP in one day, and only started feeling tired towards the last 30.


The one time I shot a .44 magnum, I was done after only one wheel through (6 shots). :what:
 
Last range session I shot...

200 rds of 9mm, 250 rds of .40, and 100 rds of .223

Aside from a bruised shoulder and a sore thumb I felt just as fresh as when I started :D
 
Roger, Shane!(re: .44 Mag.)

The time I fired a borrowed Ruger .44 Mag, I was REALLY excited!
The owner offered me his padded shooting glove, but I declined.
The first round was about what I expected: a jolt, but the barrel didn't exactly hit me in the face. The next three-four rounds grouped pretty well. I noticed my right palm was starting to tingle. By the sixth and final round, I told the owner that I really appreciated it, and was done. I wasn't in PAIN, but didn't want to waste his ammo.

I'll do it again next chance I get!
 
I routinely bring 550 22lr and a few hundred of 9 mm or 45 acp and enjoy every minute of it. Last year, when I discovered reloading, I was shooting ALOT more. I've slowed down...I'm blaming the law of diminishing returns.
 
If I am shooting for serious accuracy, on paper, I have discovered that my vision is only sharp for about 30 rounds. I can continue to shoot, but I don't get the same degree of accuracy as I did to begin with.
I spend a lot of time shooting at a steel plate target I have at ranges over 100 yards with my AR15s. The plate is about 7 inches square. I can get at least 50 rounds before my vision starts to blur and my eyes become fatigued.
I very seldom just shoot at random objects lying around. Even when I am not shooting groups on paper, I am shooting at some kind of target. I find that I enjoy shooting my AR15s so much that I might go through 100-120 rounds at a session. I want to shoot more but I feel that I am not at my best so I usually stop there. With handguns I usually shoot no more than 50 rounds. When shooting scoped rifles from a bench it isn't unusual for me to shoot less than 20 rounds and pack it in.
One factor that plays into all this is that I am lucky enough to be able to shoot often. I usually go out every couple days and I can shoot within maybe 10 minutes of my house. So, shooting a dozen rounds and going home is no big deal. I can see that if I could shoot only rarely, I would try to squeeze more out of each session.
 
My eyes will usually give out before my concentration. Should have kept better care of them when I was a kid...

Steve
 
I can go about 100 rounds with the .44 SBH before I gotta switch to another gun for a while. Long guns, on the other hand, I have no problem shooting until I'm out of ammo.
 
Poor posture could do me in very quickly.

I fired only a dozen shots from my airgun from a semi-crouch position ,and my back and my legs hurt. :(

With my handgun, I feel a hundred 9mm shots is more than enough for me to practice per range session. More than that, and I feel like I'm wasting ammo.
 
I don't really know. It's not something I really thought about.

Normally, I'll get bored with working on specific accuracy before I'll fatigue from it, at which point I start shooting for fun rather than for skill or I take a shooting break altogether and let other people shoot my guns. Then maybe I'll come back and work on accuracy again or something.

So it's really hard for me to tell, honestly. It also depends on how tired, cold, warm, hungry, etc, I am.
 
Actually, I don't know when my shooting ability fades because my bad back (3 herniated discs) gives out before I get tired of shooting. I voted for 200 rounds as that's about how much I can shoot before the back makes me quit.
 
If we're going to mix in injuries, I can add that over the summer when I had some serious tendonitis in my elbow, I didn't last 50 rounds (even in 22lr) before pain would kick in and sap all the fun out of shooting :( Thankfully, drugs have been very very good to me :cool:
 
After about 100-150 centerfire rounds, I take a 15 minute break (If at an outdoor range or in the country) or call it a day if I'm at a timed indoor range.
 
Usually, I can make it through a PPC course.

That is 150 rounds, concentrating hard.

Probably, I'm fading out before the end, but usually I can shoot consistently all through.

Now, an NRA Conventional Bullseye Match is 270 rounds. 90 from a 45, 90 from a centerfire, and 90 from a 22. All fired one handed and on your feet like a gentleperson.

If you want to develop some staying power, work on that.
 
I voted 200 because I rarely shoot more than this on the indoor range. I've shot 140 rounds of 10mm and 80 rounds of .40 and felt fine. Last time out I shot 70 rounds out of my Bersa Thunder 380 and 100 out of my SW99 .40 and had MORE than enough....

Michael
 
In my experience, fatigue usually depends on how zealous you are about your training regimen. If you shoot for fun, then you're likely to fatigue quickly. But if you're the type that shoots to train, then your devotion to your craft usually overrides fatigue.

Its akin to a kid in a video arcade where the tired parent says, "You ready yet? I'm tired and I want to go home." and the kid says, "No way man, I'm just getting started!"

I'm that kid. :neener:
 
Right around 300 rounds of 9mm.

I shoot 200-300 rounds a week because that is the most rounds I can shoot accurately.

But..........................

If I shoot after that it isn't for accuracy it's just for fun. Some times it's just fun to load up a bunch of 15 rounders and blast away! To hell with the accuracy!!! What can I say, WalMart has cheap ammo and I love to shoot!!!
 
Man, you 'My shooting ability doesn't fade' voters are real men! My answer was after 100 rounds.

There for a year or so when I was going for accuracy and doing 'drill bills', I would take my Dan Wesson 22 revolver and some centerfire handgun, either a CZ, a 1911 or Taurus PT99 to the range. I would shoot about 50 rounds of the 22 then switch to centerfire. Generally, I'd take 100 rounds of ammo. First 10 rounds was slow paced fire at 25 yards. Then in no particular order I'd do double taps at 25 yards, double taps at 7 yards, 3, 4 or 5 round rapid fire at 7 yards, one shot to each of two targets at 25 yards, one shot into one target, then another, then back to the first one. Then some 50 yard target shooting and 100 yard gong ringing. Then I'd go back to informal rimfire plinking.

I love the 45 ACP cartridge and I love the 1911 platform but I must admit that I did much better shooting at the longer distances when I had a 9mm with me. Also, the few time we started off shooting centerfire at longer distances, after a short warm up, my groups were better and I was more confident in them than when shooting at longer distances after a lot of shooting.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top