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Farm Machinery
Competition Ploughing
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<blockquote data-quote="arcobob" data-source="post: 5948046" data-attributes="member: 4112"><p>Correct and consistent positioning of the head is the key. In a match rifle rifle shooting analogy, using aperture sights the aperture rearsight positions the master eye. This equates to the line down the bonnet, the steering wheel nut or any other reference point. You don`t look at it once the head and eye are positioned. The eye focuses on the foresight (not the rearsight) or nearest pole and makes alignment or reference to the furthest pole (the target). In practice the two furthest poles are both similarly in focus for normal sighted people whereas in shooting the eye cannot focus on both a foresight two feet away and a target a great distance away therefore a choice has to be made and the foresight is accepted practice..</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="arcobob, post: 5948046, member: 4112"] Correct and consistent positioning of the head is the key. In a match rifle rifle shooting analogy, using aperture sights the aperture rearsight positions the master eye. This equates to the line down the bonnet, the steering wheel nut or any other reference point. You don`t look at it once the head and eye are positioned. The eye focuses on the foresight (not the rearsight) or nearest pole and makes alignment or reference to the furthest pole (the target). In practice the two furthest poles are both similarly in focus for normal sighted people whereas in shooting the eye cannot focus on both a foresight two feet away and a target a great distance away therefore a choice has to be made and the foresight is accepted practice.. [/QUOTE]
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