The Most Overlooked Failure Point on Your Precision Rifle
There are a lot of things that go wrong in a precision rifle course, but one of the most common, by far, is something most people never think about: your optic mount and base. Here’s what I’ve learned from years of experience: I received my basic sniper certification from the Sig Sauer Academy and my advanced sniper certification from Tacflow International. I was fortunate to be selected by GPS Sniper School to serve as their chief instructor, where I also rewrote and modernized their course outline. After getting that program approved by a local law enforcement agency, my journey as a precision rifle instructor really began.
HOW IT ALL PLAYS OUT IN PRECISION ONE
In our Precision One course—a five-day class focused on foundational long-range shooting—I’ve trained hundreds of students. Many of them have said the course is invaluable: efficient, practical, and deeply rooted in real-world applications. These processes were built on my background as an infantry rifleman, military instructor, private military contractor, and later, sniper-certified trainer.
Through all of that experience, I've come to recognize a consistent pattern: successful precision rifle engagements rely on systems. Follow the system, and things go well. Ignore the system, and even minor failures can lead to big headaches. This is where an often-missed step comes in, usually at the end of day one. Remove your optic mount and base. Then reinstall them with proper torque and a drop of Loctite on every screw on the base. Almost every time, someone skips this.
WHY MOST SHOOTERS SKIP THE HOMEWORK
Students don’t skip it out of laziness. It’s usually because they’re overwhelmed with information. They’ve learned more in one day than they expected, and the idea of touching their optic, something that already feels like black magic, is intimidating. They’re afraid of losing zero, or they think their current setup is “good enough.” Then day two or three rolls around, and we hit the live fire again. At least one person’s gear comes loose. We spend time diagnosing what failed, and they'll admit, they didn’t do the homework.
THE FIX: QUALITY AND ACCOUNTABILITY
How do we prevent this? Start with quality equipment. While most shooters bring a good rifle and optic, many overlook mounts and bases—where quality matters most. A good base doesn’t have to be expensive, but it does need to be solid. A quality scope mount, however, often starts around the $150 range if you want something that will hold up under stress and recoil. And here’s the key part: when installing your base, use Loctite. That base is directly connected to your action. Your action generates heat and absorbs recoil. Think about what breaks a bolt free in a garage: heat and impact. That’s exactly what your rifle’s delivering every time you fire.
Once everything is installed correctly, use a paint pen, which is a marker with brightly colored paint used for making visible marks. Mark your screws at their torque setting—the specific tightness required for each screw—and create a witness line, a mark spanning both the screw and the surface it fastens, for quick visual confirmation. That way, if anything moves, you’ll know it before you break the shot. It also lets you return everything to its proper place if something shifts.
KNOW BEFORE YOU SHOOT
One of my favorite sayings in class is:
“A new shooter will miss and not know why.
A good shooter will miss and know why.
But an excellent shooter won’t shoot, because he knows it’ll be a miss, and he’ll fix it first.”
It’s simple: a precision shooter trusts the process. That process includes not just shooting but maintaining, checking, and verifying your equipment. So if you’re setting up your precision rifle, don’t just invest in a good barrel and a nice scope. Invest in your base, your mount, your torque wrench, and your discipline. Because the shot you miss from a loose screw is the one you could have avoided with 10 minutes and a paint pen.
