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Canadian sniper sets world record with 2.2-mile pickoff of ISIS fighter

Galseigin

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Dec 10, 2014
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Amazing..that takes a lot of skill..

A Canadian sniper set what appears to be a record, picking off an ISIS fighter from some 2.2 miles away, and disrupting a potentially deadly operation by the terror group in Iraq.

Shooting experts say the fatal shot at a world-record distance of 11,316 feet underscores how stunningly sophisticated military snipers are becoming. The feat, pulled off by a special forces sniper from Canada’s Joint Task Force 2, smashed the previous distance record for successful sniper shots by some 3,280 feet, a record set by a British sniper.
"The Canadian Special Operations Command can confirm that a member of the Joint Task Force 2 successfully hit a target from 3,540 metres [2.2 miles]," the Canadian military said in a statement.

While officials would not say where the shot took place, the statement noted the command "provides its expertise to Iraqi security force to detect, identify and defeat Daesh activities from well behind the Iraqi security force front line in Mosul."
The new record was set using a McMillan TAC-50, a .50-caliber weapon and the largest shoulder-fired firearm in existence.
Ryan Cleckner, a former U.S. Army Ranger sniper who served two tours of duty in Afghanistan and wrote the authoritative “Long Range Shooting Handbook,” called the feat an “incredible” accomplishment, one that owes as much if not more to the spotter’s expertise than the shooter's skill.

“The spotter would have had to successfully calculate five factors: distance, wind, atmospheric conditions and the speed of the earth’s rotation at their latitude,” Cleckner told Fox News.
“Because wind speed and direction would vary over the two miles the bullet traveled, the true challenge here was being able to calculate the actual wind speed and direction all the way to the target.”
Atmospheric conditions also would have posed a huge challenge for the spotter.

“To get the atmospheric conditions just right, the spotter would have had to understand the temperature, humidity and barometric pressure of the air the round had to travel through.

Cleckner said that while the ammunition that Canadian special forces use in the TAC-50 is “off-the-charts powerful,” with some 13,000 foot-pounds of force when it comes out of the muzzle, the speed of a bullet, a 750-grain Hornady round, is not as important as the aerodynamic efficiency of the bullet.
“The key to having a sniper round travel that far and hit a small target has less to do with speed and more to do with the efficiency with which the projectile moves through the air,” he said.

That’s because while sniper bullets exit the muzzle at several times the speed of sound they eventually slow down to less than the speed of sound, and at that point they become less stable. An efficiently designed bullet reduces that instability, he explained.

Dennis Santiago, California-based firearms expert and instructor, said the partnership between the spotter and the shooter is critical.
"Equipment is just a starting point. The shooter on a military team will surely be skilled enough to hold hard on the 'aimpoint' and fire the shot accurately," he told Fox News. "The spotter member of the sniper team is responsible for telling the shooter the precise moment the atmospherics align with the calculations they've made. When it comes together, it's 'mission accomplished'."

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2017/06/2...ecord-with-2-1-mile-pickoff-isis-fighter.html
 

wilbur

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Jan 19, 2004
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I thought they were using laser profilers these days? Tanks have had them for decades. They detect and measure wind velocity along the bullet's ballistic path and apply a correction to get a an accurate shot. An integrated fire control system would also take into account the ballistics of the bullet, as well as temperature and humidity, in order to get a high first hit probability.
 

Samranchoi

Asian Picasso
Jan 11, 2014
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Truly amazing skill to have been able to accomplish what they did. I wonder if this was a one shot kill or if the kill happened on subsequent shots.
 

Twister

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Aug 24, 2002
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To give you some idea of how far that is, on the radio this morning they were saying the distance
is similar to Bloor/Yonge to Queens Quay.

The bullet would take 10 seconds to hit the target.
10 seconds to hit the target? Then it means the guy was either sitting or lying down.
 

Occasionally

Active member
May 22, 2011
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Pretty cool to hear, but when it comes to sniping, how many shots do these guys take before it hits?

It's like a video I saw one time of a guy shooting a basketball from a bridge into a basket on the ground. He made it. And it was a high bridge. I'm not talking about a highway overpass.

But he never said how many shots he and his friends took.
 

GPIDEAL

Prolific User
Jun 27, 2010
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10 seconds to hit the target? Then it means the guy was either sitting or lying down.
10 seconds seems long, but maybe there was a lot of elevation to t**********se too.

A regular rifle bullet travelling 2,200 fps can travel 2.2 miles in 5.28 seconds.
 

oil&gas

Well-known member
Apr 16, 2002
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Ghawar
A Canadian sniper set what appears to be a record, picking off an ISIS fighter from some 2.2 miles away, and disrupting a potentially deadly operation by the terror group in Iraq.
Are we going to need more of these soldiers to fight terrorism
and send them to the middle east for our safety?

Had we dealt with those behind 9/11 as criminals instead of
launching military invasion we probably won't have any ISIS
fighters to shot today.
 

wilbur

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Jan 19, 2004
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Truly amazing skill to have been able to accomplish what they did. I wonder if this was a one shot kill or if the kill happened on subsequent shots.
If he missed, at htat distance, how could the spotter be able to see where the splash is so that he can give the shooter a correction? Can you even see a human figure in a rifle scope that far away? maybe they got bullets with guidance systems nowadays?
 

Insidious Von

My head is my home
Sep 12, 2007
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Had we dealt with those behind 9/11 as criminals instead of
launching military invasion we probably won't have any ISIS
fighters to shot today.
He's right about this. Had the US not invaded Iraq, Daesh, previously known as al - Qaeda in Iraq, wouldn't have gotten off the ground.

The spotter must be a math expert, he had the advantage of Iraq's hot dry climate. In a tropical setting, that hit would have been impossible. The arc of trajectory would have been too severe.

I wonder how the Wahhabi are taking to the fact that Daesh destroyed Mosul's ancient mosque? They didn't lose any sleep over the destruction of infidel antiquities in Playmira, a grand old mosque is different.
 

fisherm

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Aug 17, 2014
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10 seconds seems long, but maybe there was a lot of elevation to t**********se too.

A regular rifle bullet travelling 2,200 fps can travel 2.2 miles in 5.28 seconds.
That assumes a constant velocity but the bullet would decelerate and take longer to reach target.

Maybe the sniper was just lucky. Accounting for all those variables including the possibility of a random moving target, there's gotta be an element of chance.
 

dirkd101

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Sep 29, 2005
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Truly amazing skill to have been able to accomplish what they did. I wonder if this was a one shot kill or if the kill happened on subsequent shots.
It's usually a case of one shot, one kill, as that's what they train for. If it was on a follow up shot, the guy he killed was a dolt.

Snipers and their spotters use special ballistics tables in order to make the shot. These tables take into account their location, as the elements of that place have to be taken into consideration, as does the time of day. The scopes they use are also a specialized and each sniper would have his zeroed to his liking.
 

HobbyHorse

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Nov 14, 2009
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I don't get why the earth's rotation has to be factored in. Wouldn't the bullet, being close to the earth within the field of gravity, be rotating along with the earth and the target?
 

frankcastle

Well-known member
Feb 4, 2003
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10 seconds seems long, but maybe there was a lot of elevation to t**********se too.

A regular rifle bullet travelling 2,200 fps can travel 2.2 miles in 5.28 seconds.
The bullet may leave the barrel at 2200 fps but gravity, wind resistance etc will immediately cause the bullet to decelerate.
 

frankcastle

Well-known member
Feb 4, 2003
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I don't get why the earth's rotation has to be factored in. Wouldn't the bullet, being close to the earth within the field of gravity, be rotating along with the earth and the target?
Over a short distance it doesn't matter as the effect is small but over 2.2 miles a slight deviation can mean the difference between a hit or miss.
 

danmand

Well-known member
Nov 28, 2003
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I have a hard time understanding how people can celebrate the killing of a human being. It is a sad reflection of the time we live in.
 

Galseigin

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Dec 10, 2014
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I have a hard time understanding how people can celebrate the killing of a human being. It is a sad reflection of the time we live in.
Anytime a terrorist that kills innocent people, boils people in tar, take women and children as sex slaves, lights people on fire...is killed or neutralized the world is a better place.

These same people have run over and torn apart innocent civilians in Europe... did you offer some empathy and mention that these were human beings too? No...
 
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