Close Menu
Gun Recs
  • Home
  • Gun Reviews
  • Gear
  • Outdoors
  • Videos
What's Hot

The Seekins Precision SIC: A Modular Rifle for Special Operations Use

The Lever Action Supreme Rifle: Henry’s 21st Century Lever Gun

Construction and Design of a Remote, Off-Grid Residence – Part 1, by Mrs. Alaska

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Gun Recs
  • Home
  • Gun Reviews
  • Gear
  • Outdoors
  • Videos
Subscribe
Gun Recs
Home»Gun Reviews»Rifleman Q&A: Point Of Hold
Gun Reviews

Rifleman Q&A: Point Of Hold

Gunner QuinnBy Gunner QuinnDecember 21, 2025
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Copy Link
Follow Us
Google News Flipboard
Rifleman Q&A: Point Of Hold
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link

Q: I have always been a rifle and handgun shooter, with little shotgun experience, and I am a little confused about the “point of hold” shown in the pattern illustrations of our magazine. Is the point of hold, or point of aim, placed differently relative to the target depending on the shotgun’s use?

A: There are two types of shotgun patterning: One determines how your shotgun’s barrel, choke, shot size, shot charge and brand of shotshell perform in terms of downrange pattern density, and a second determines where the shotgun actually places its pattern in terms of point of aim or hold (low and right shown here).

Determining where the gun shoots, i.e. placement of the shot pattern downrange, varies depending on how the shotgun is used. Trap shooters who shoot rising targets prefer their guns to place the center of the pattern from 70 to 80 percent above the point of hold. Skeet shooters whose targets are crossing prefer about 60 percent of the target above the hold point so they can “float” the target. Live pigeon shooters, sporting clays aficionados and hunters tend to prefer a 50/50 vertical pattern placement, as live birds do not fly on a predictable path.

Certainly, individual shooters learn their favorite target placement based on their own shooting style, experience and target visualization, but the above are accepted general pattern placements.

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Copy Link
Previous ArticleEvery American NEED These Guns during War In 2025!
Next Article 7 Pistols Better Than The New Glock Gen 6

Related Posts

The Seekins Precision SIC: A Modular Rifle for Special Operations Use

March 14, 2026

The Lever Action Supreme Rifle: Henry’s 21st Century Lever Gun

March 14, 2026

I Carry: Taurus TX9 Compact in a Galco Holster

March 13, 2026
Latest Posts

The Lever Action Supreme Rifle: Henry’s 21st Century Lever Gun

Construction and Design of a Remote, Off-Grid Residence – Part 1, by Mrs. Alaska

The Real Reason Glock 19 Dominates

Preparedness Notes for Saturday — March 14, 2026

Trending Posts

Reboot – Timeless Guns: the 1911, GLOCK 17 & AR-15 Are NEVER Going Away

March 14, 2026

FALCO Upgrades Timeless Series Pancake Holsters

March 13, 2026

I Carry: Taurus TX9 Compact in a Galco Holster

March 13, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Newsletter
© 2026 Gun Recs. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.