1.) On a rifle zeroed for 200 yds, the difference between a 200-yard shot and one at 88 yards is about two inches.
2.) Two-stage triggers are almost ubiquitous on bolt-action military rifles. The rifle competition crowd have been increasingly using them in the past 15 years. A two-stage trigger simply isn't the impediment you seem to believe it to be.
3.) A hair trigger would actually make it easier to shoot accurately.
4.) The effort required to work the bolt doesn't affect the accuracy of the rifle itself.
Simmons was saying that CE139 was set up differently from what his shooters were used to, and his guys had to adjust to it. Even then, all of them were able to perform to the WC's 2-out-of-3 hits, and at least one was able to achieve 3 hits in less than 5.6 seconds. Each design has it's idiosyncrasies, and any shooter used to one type is liable to face a learning curve if they pick up another and try to shoot it. The only thing you had right is that the scope sucked. Read Frazier's account of it -- it lost zero and they had to shoot several rounds out of it to get the reticle to stabilize itself enough so that it could be reliably zeroed. The problem for you is that the iron sights were perfectly usable, and a scope that bad would easily found out as a lemon by anyone who shot it.
"1.) On a rifle zeroed for 200 yds, the difference between a 200-yard shot and one at 88 yards is about two inches."At 88 yards it sailed over the top of the board holding the target.
Mr. EISENBERG. How did he do with the iron sight on the third target?
Mr. SIMMONS. On the third target he missed the boards completely. And we have not checked this out. It appears that for the firing
posture which Mr. Miller--Specialist Miller uses, the iron sight is not zeroed for him, since his impacts on the first and second
targets were quite high, and against the third target we would assume that the projectile went over the top of the target, which
extended only a few inches over the top of the silhouette
"Mr. EISENBERG. Mr. Simmons, were your marksmen instructed to aim at the three targets in consecutive order?
Mr. SIMMONS. The marksmen were instructed to take as much time as they desired at the first target, and then to fire--at the first
target, being at 175 feet--to then fire at the target emplaced at 240 feet, and then at the one at 265 feet.
"2.) Two-stage triggers are almost ubiquitous on bolt-action military rifles. The rifle competition crowd have been increasingly using them in the past 15 years. A two-stage trigger simply isn't the impediment you seem to believe it to be.""3.) A hair trigger would actually make it easier to shoot accurately.'It's not what I believe it's what is in the testimony of the CO of the Army team of expert shooters, Mr. Simmons.
Mr. SIMMONS. Yes. But there are two stages to the trigger. Our riflemen were all used to a trigger with a constant pull.
When the slack was taken up, then they expected the round to fire. But actually when the slack is taken up, you tend to
have a hair trigger here, which requires a bit of getting used to.
Mr. McCLOY. This does not have a hair trigger after the slack is taken up?
Mr. SIMMONS. This tends to have the hair trigger as soon as you move it after the slack is taken up. You achieve or you
feel greater resistance to the movement of the trigger, and then ordinarily you would expect the weapon to have fired,
and in this case then as you move it to overcome that, it fires immediately. And our firers were moving the shoulder into
the weapon.
"4.) The effort required to work the bolt doesn't affect the accuracy of the rifle itself."Never said it did. I did however point out the testimony of Mr. Simmons who said his men found working the bolt caused them to take the sights off the target. I noted that a shooter in the 6th floor SE corner TSBD wouldn't have had time to reacquire a moving target in the WC scenario.
http://www.maryferrell.org/mffweb/archive/viewer/showDoc.do?docId=39&relPageId=451Mr. Eisenberg: Was it reported to you by the person who ran the machine-run tests whether they had difficulties with
sighting the weapon in?
Mr. Simmons: Well, they could not sight the weapon in using the telescope, and no attempt was made to sight it in using
the iron sight. We did adjust the telescope sight by the addition of two shims, one which tended to adjust the azimuth,
and one which adjusted an elevation.