Sniper shooting records. One bullet kills six: masterful sniper shots that went down in history. “At this distance they won’t even hit an elephant.”

Hitting a target from a distance of 3.5 kilometers with direct fire is a difficult task for almost any military equipment. When it comes to civilian weapons, it is completely unattainable. More precisely, it was unattainable until this moment. The Texas guys from the Hill Country Rifle company, which produces and refines rifles, did the hitherto impossible - they hit the target from a distance of 3,475 meters (3,800 yards).

Thefirearmblog reports that the previous unofficial record was 3,550 yards (3,246 meters). The author of the new achievement is Jim Spinella, who shot from a modified Long Range Extreme 375 Cheytac rifle ($6995 for the base model) and used CHEYTAC .375/350 GR cartridges.

It took the sniper 19 rounds to zero. After making all the adjustments, the hit accuracy was 90% on a 36-inch target (91.5 cm). The shooting took place far from “greenhouse conditions” - during the record-setting period, the wind was blowing at a speed of 4 m/s with gusts of up to 7.5 m/s.

To understand the severity of the moment, here are a few facts:

  • at the peak of the parabola the bullet was 100 meters above the aiming point;
  • from the moment of the shot to the hit, the bullet flew for more than 8.5 seconds;
  • Due to air vibrations, the target is almost invisible at such a distance even through an optical sight.

The guys are not going to stop there, planning to reach the 4,000-yard mark (about 3,658 meters) this fall. Until now, the achievements of snipers in accurate shooting range had not been officially recorded, but Spinella and his comrades decided that it was time to put an end to this.

In combat conditions, the farthest confirmed sniper shot was made from a distance of 2475 meters. In November 2009, British Army Corporal Craig Harrison participated in a joint force operation in Afghanistan. During the battle in the Musa Qala area, using the L115A3 Long Range Rifle rifle, from a distance of 2475 meters, he managed to destroy two Taliban machine gunners with two shots, and with the third, disable the machine gun itself. In an interview with the BBC, Harrison said that it took him 9 sighting shots to then successively “place” three bullets exactly on targets.


Corporal Craig Harrison - author of the "combat" sniper shooting range record

Harrison also mentioned that that day in the Musa Qala area the weather conditions were ideal for long-range shooting: clear visibility and complete calm. The bullets fired by Harrison from the L115A3 Long Range Rifle reached their target after approximately 6 seconds of flight.

It is noteworthy that the rifle and type of cartridge used by Jim Spinella is legal on the civilian market and is available for purchase as a hunting weapon in many countries around the world. Thus, anyone can purchase a rifle if they have permission to purchase rifled weapons and the required amount of money.

A selection of the most notable shooters, whose long-range shots made it onto the pages of history.

In seventh place is the shot of the American veteran of the war in Iraq, Sergeant Major Jim Gilliland, 1367 yards (1244 meters). Shot fired from a standard M24 rifle using standard 7.62x51mm NATO ammunition in 2005. A very good result for a general-arms rifle of not the largest caliber.

Number six is ​​British Army Corporal Christopher Reynolds and his August 2009 accurate shot at 2,026 yards (1,844 meters). Rifle - Accuracy International L115A3. Ammo - .338 Lapua Magnum LockBase B408. The target hit is a Taliban commander nicknamed "Mullah", responsible for a number of attacks on coalition troops in Afghanistan. If the sources do not lie, then the shot was so accurate that the “Mulla” fell directly into the hands of the militant following him, and if the bullet had had enough penetrating power, Reynolds would have chalked up two heads at once.

Number five - Sergeant Carlos Hascock, shot at 2,500 yards (2,275 meters). The date is February 1967, during the Vietnam conflict. The historic shot that made the sergeant a hero of his time was not made from a sniper rifle, but from an M2 Browning machine gun. Ammo - .50 BMG. Hascock is still a legend in the American army today - he ranks fourth on the list of snipers who hit the maximum number of targets. At one time, the Vietnamese placed a bounty of 30,000 US dollars on his head; they gave Hascock the nickname “white feather” for his habit of wearing a feather in his hat, violating the generally accepted rules of sniper camouflage. However, this was not the only thing he was noted for - Hascock's second tour of duty in Vietnam ended early in September 1969, when the armored personnel carrier in which he was traveling was hit by a mine. Despite his own severe burns (more than 40% of his body), Hascock pulled seven of his comrades out of the burning armored personnel carrier.

Fourth place - American Sergeant Brian Kremer and his shot at 2515 yards (2288.6 meters) in March 2004. Weapon - Barrett M82A1. Cartridges - Raufoss NM140 MP. During his two years in Iraq, Kremer fired two successful shots over 2,350 yards, demonstrating the sergeant's high level of skill.

Third place went to Canadian, Corporal Arron Perry. Shot range - 2526 yards (2298.6 meters) in March 2002. Weapon - McMillan Tac-50. Ammo: Hornady A-MAX .50 (.50 BMG).

Second place - a shot at 2657 yards (2417.8 meters) also goes to a Canadian: Corporal Rob Furlong, who broke Arron's record, with exactly the same rifle and ammunition.

In first place is the unsurpassed (so far) record of the Briton Craig Harrison. During the Afghan conflict in November 2009, he hit his best double shot at 2,707 yards (2,475 meters). The defeat of the target was documented - two Taliban machine gunners were killed in succession. This record makes Harrison the best sniper of all time.

Why are there no Russian snipers on the list? Firstly, we never had such a cult of long-range shooting, and secondly, the army doctrine was different.

However, in a non-combat situation, Russian snipers set a world record by hitting a target located almost three and a half kilometers away from the firing position.

At the same time, it is known that the work of our sniper professionals is classified, and not only their names are not known, but also the rifles with which these masters work. It is possible that somewhere in Russia lives the heir of Vasily Zaitsev, who somewhere and sometime, in one of the conflicts, hit a target at a greater distance than any of the seven aforementioned foreigners.

Five of the longest shots taken by military snipers. This rating includes only long-range shots made by military snipers during armed conflicts. A record shot must be unique for its era and glorify the shooter. The established record must last for quite a long time, or the shot must break a record that has been unsurpassed for decades.
“FROM THIS DISTANCE THEY WILL NOT EVEN HIT AN ELEPHANT”

The names of the first shooters, who became famous for the longest shots, remained in history solely thanks to their victims - high-ranking military leaders. The first attested ultra-long shot dates back to the era of the Napoleonic Wars - its victim was the French general, Baron Auguste de Colbert. In 1809, he was killed by a rifleman of the 95th British Rifle Division, a certain Thomas Plunkett - he was in fifth position. It is believed that Plunkett killed Colbert from an incredible for that time 600 meters. And to prove that the hit was not accidental, he killed the general’s adjutant with another shot - however, this is rather a legend. There is no exact information about what kind of weapon the British shooter used. Some sources say that Plunkett fired from a standard smoothbore musket of the 1722 model, the famous Brown Bess. But it is more likely that the long-range shot was fired from a rifled fitting, which by that time had appeared in the British army. By the way, British snipers of the 19th century - military men, hunters, athletes - often used a rather unusual technique - they shot lying on their backs, resting the barrel on the shin of a bent leg. It is believed that it was from this position that Plunkett shot de Colbert.

“At this distance they won’t even hit an elephant,” these were the last words of American General John Sedgwick - a second later he fell from a sniper’s bullet. This is already the American Civil War of 1861-1865. At the Battle of Spotsylvania, Sedgwick, who fought on the side of the United States, controlled artillery fire. The Confederate riflemen, seeing the enemy commander, began hunting for him, the staff officers lay down and invited their commander to go to cover. The enemy positions were separated by a distance of approximately one kilometer. Sedgwick, considering this distance safe, began to shame his subordinates for their timidity, but did not have time to finish - a bullet from an unknown Sergeant Grace hit him in the head. This is perhaps the longest shot of the 19th century, although it is impossible to say whether it was an accident or not. This is the fourth position in the rating. Descriptions of long-range shots - at a distance of half a kilometer - are also found in the chronicles of the War of Independence and the American Civil War. Among the North American militias there were many good hunters, and they used long-barreled, large-caliber hunting rifles and rifles as weapons.

CARLOS "WHITE FEATHER"

The first half of the twentieth century did not bring new deadly records, at least those that would become part of history and glorify the shooter. During the First and Second World Wars, the skill of snipers was determined not by the ability to make an ultra-long shot, but by the number of enemies killed. It is known that one of the most successful snipers of all time, the Finn Simo Häyhä (he accounted for up to 705 enemy soldiers killed) preferred to shoot from a distance of no more than 400 meters.

For new range records, a weapon was needed that significantly exceeded the characteristics of standard sniper rifles. Such a weapon was the Browning M2 machine gun with a caliber of 12.7x99 millimeters (50 BMG), developed in the early 30s of the last century. During the Korean War, American soldiers began to use it as a sniper rifle - the machine gun was equipped with an optical sight and could fire single fire. With its help, a veteran of the Vietnam War, American Sergeant Carlos Norman Hathcock II, set a range record that stood for 35 years. In February 1967, an American destroyed the enemy from a distance of 2286 meters - third position. From his M2 sniper, Hathcock was guaranteed to hit a tall target with single shots from a distance of 2000 yards (a little more than 1800 meters), that is, approximately twice as much as the standard army “high-precision” M24 in calibers 308 Win (7.62x51 millimeters) and 300 Win Mag (7.62x67 millimeters). The Vietnamese nicknamed Hathcock “White Feather” - allegedly, despite the requirements of camouflage, he always attached a feather to his hat. Some sources claim that the North Vietnamese command placed a reward of 30 thousand dollars on the sniper's head. It is noteworthy that Hathcock received his highest award - the Silver Star - not for sniper shooting, but for saving his comrades from a burning armored personnel carrier. Inspired by Hathcock's successes, the US military department created a special commission that studied the possibility of creating a heavy sniper rifle based on Browning.

RIFLE FROM THE GARAGE

The Americans never made rifles from machine guns. But in 1982, former police officer Ronnie G. Barrett designed a 12.7 mm sniper rifle in a garage workshop - it was later designated the Barrett M82. The inventor offered his development to monsters of the arms market, such as Winchester and FN, and after the latter refused, he established his own small-scale production, registering the company Barrett Firearms. Barrett's first clients were hunters and civilian lovers of high-precision shooting, and at the very end of the 80s, a batch of 100 M82A1 rifles was purchased by Swedish troops, and after the Swedes, the American military became interested in Barrett's rifle. Today, the word "Barrett" has virtually become synonymous with a large-caliber precision rifle.

Another “high-precision” caliber of 12.7x99 millimeters began to be produced in the mid-80s by the small American company McMillan Bros. The rifle was called the McMillan TAC-50 - today they are used by special units in the USA and Canada. The full benefits of large-caliber precision weapons were revealed in Iraq and Afghanistan. With the outbreak of hostilities in the Middle East, snipers of the Western coalition began to update range records almost every year. In 2002, in Afghanistan, Canadian Arron Perry, using a McMillan TAC-50 rifle, hit a Mujahid from a distance of 2,526 yards (just over 2.3 thousand meters), thereby breaking Hathcock's long-standing record. In the same year, his compatriot Rob Furlong made a successful shot at 2657 yards (just over 2.4 thousand meters). These two shots are in second position.

American sniper Brian Kremer came close to the shooters from Canada - in March 2004 in Iraq, he hit a target at a distance of 2300 meters with a Barrett M82A1 rifle. During his two years of service in Iraq, Kremer is believed to have fired two successful shots with a range of more than 2,100 meters.

In first place is the unsurpassed record of Briton Craig Harrison to date. During an operation in Afghanistan in November 2009, at a range of 2470 meters, he destroyed two Taliban machine gunners and their machine gun. According to Craig himself, before the three effective shots he had to make nine more sighting shots.

This story began almost three years ago, when Russian shooter and manufacturer of high-precision long-range rifles Vlad Lobaev saw a video on YouTube where cheerful old men from Texas hit a target with a rifle at a distance of 3,600 yards (3,292 m). Vlad decided to take on the challenge and compete with the Americans. Fortunately, he had his own weapons factory, Lobaev Arms, at hand.

Record rifle SVLK-14 “Twilight”.

The Americans fired from a custom-made ultra-long-range rifle of rare caliber .375 CheyTac. By that time, Lobaev’s company was already mass-producing the ultra-long-range rifle SVLK-14 “Twilight” in an even rarer and more powerful .408 CheyTac caliber, which allows sniper shooting at distances of over 2 km. For the record, they took a special custom “Twilight” with a titanium chassis and firing pin, with a barrel length of 720 mm and a weight of more than 9 kg. In April 2015, on a field in the Kaluga region (there are simply no multi-kilometer shooting ranges in Russia), with this rifle, Lobaev’s team, after sighting shots, hit a target at a distance of 3400 m. The video with the record was posted on YouTube. The Americans reacted calmly: they say, okay, let's continue the duel in absentia.

Subsonic

Not only the Americans reacted: a French sniper from the Foreign Legion, after long training, hit a target at a distance of 3600 m, but, apart from an article in a small specialized magazine, there is no information about this record, no one posted videos. The Americans also crossed the mark, first 3600 and then 4000 yards (3657 m). Lobaev’s company studied this video almost under a microscope: some parameters of the shot did not match, the flight time did not match up with the initial speed and angle of inclination of the bar. Nothing has changed in ballistics, but several hundred meters have been added. This does not happen, but since the competition was originally conceived as a competition of gentlemen, the Lobaevites decided to continue to shoot fairly with the Americans. And win by knockout - hit from four kilometers away.

Ultra-long-range shooting for shooters is considered to be shooting at a distance where at the end of the trajectory the bullet travels at deep subsonic levels, because with supersonic everything is clear - there ballistics are calculated easily, using simple mathematical methods. But subsonic ballistics is considered more difficult, and what is most unpleasant is that in this mode some physical processes occur that make it difficult to shoot at ultra-long distances. Firstly, a re-stabilization effect occurs. The linear speed slows down per 1000 m, say, three times - from 900 m/s to 300 m/s. And the bullet rotation speed is only 5-10%. At subsonic speeds the speed is even lower, but the rotation speed is still the same. This leads to the fact that all the design and manufacturing defects of the bullet begin to come out, which greatly affects the dispersion. In addition, at low speeds, errors in assessing wind and weather conditions become noticeable. The second factor is turbulence in the bottom part at deep subsonic levels. At speeds slightly less than 300 m/s this is not critical, but at ranges of more than 2 km it greatly affects accuracy. There is only one way to combat these phenomena - to develop a bullet design with a different bottom design.

Classic problems for ultra-long range shooting require increased bullet weight and improved aerodynamics. Lobaev set his first record with a standard D27 bullet, an analogue of the Lost River, widely known in the West. These are elongated, solidly turned bullets for long-range shooting, also called Ultra VLD. They were no longer suitable for new records. If you follow the path of increasing the mass of the bullet, you will need to change the entire cartridge - either increase the chamber or use a new progressively burning powder, or even switch to a different caliber. Another caliber (Browning .50 or domestic 12.7 x 108 mm) is a transition to another class and a completely different weapon with all the ensuing consequences: other barrels, bolts, receivers, dimensions, weight and a significant increase in recoil, at which There is no longer any question of pleasure from shooting.

Lobaev decided not to deviate from the old cartridge case and caliber .408 CheyTac, not to change either the dimensions or weight of the weapon. He was able to develop a heavier 30 gram D30 bullet while staying within the standard cartridge. This was also done because the cartridge is quite accessible and anyone can try to repeat the achievement. The design of the bullet was also modified: it began to resemble a long elongated spindle with two pointed ends, which made it possible to achieve an almost ideal ballistic coefficient of one. This required a change in the rifle's design, with a faster rifling pitch to stabilize the longer, heavier bullet. If the classic rifling pitch in the 408 caliber is thirteen, then on the record-breaking rifle Lobaev decided to use ten. Despite the fact that the initial speed of the new bullet was lower (875 m/s for the D30 versus 935 m/s for the D27), it had a flatter trajectory at 2 km.

Lobaev's know-how is the side mount of the sight for ultra-long-range shooting. A year ago it was forbidden to even photograph it. This system can also find application in the army: when shooting at long distances, it helps to get by with available Russian weapons.

Lateral support

One of the main problems with record shooting is that you can't keep raising the scope bar indefinitely. When shooting at such distances, the rifle has large elevation angles, as when shooting overhead, almost like a howitzer. At the top point of the trajectory, the bullet travels at an altitude of several hundred meters. No scopes allow such adjustments for aiming, so for record shooting they use special rails for the scope. However, you cannot endlessly raise the bar: the muzzle device begins to block the aiming line. This is exactly what confused Lobaev in the last American record: the angle of inclination of the bar did not correspond to the correction required for such a distance. Lobaev spotted a solution to this problem at the artillery, where the sight had long been moved to the left of the barrel. The solution is simple, but no one in the world has used it before Lobaev. If you look closely at the photo, you can see that the sight on Lobaev’s record-breaking rifles runs to the left of the barrel. Which turned out to be more convenient for shooting: you don’t need to throw your head back and you can take the optimal position.

On the second try

They were going to break the record last summer in the fields near Krasnodar. For this purpose, a giant target measuring 10 x 10 m was made in order to at least take aim. No one knew how a bullet behaved at such distances, and there were no precise mathematical models. It was only clear that the bullets would enter the ground in the target area almost vertically, so the target was positioned at a large angle. Another difficulty was that the soil was wet during the shooting, so it was necessary to hit the target exactly: traces of hitting the ground at such low speeds and almost vertical angles are not visible. Unfortunately for the entire team, the record failed the first time: they failed to hit even such a large target. While they were preparing for the next round, the Americans posted a video on the Internet with a 4 km record. It became clear that we needed to shoot even further.

For the past year, Lobaev and his team have been conjuring their magic on the rifle and new bullets, practically not giving out information about the project, fearing to jinx the world record, constantly approaching the cherished milestone, first taking 4170 m, then 4200. And in October of this year they succeeded in the incredible: famous shooter and promoter Andrei Ryabinsky hit a target measuring 1 x 1 m from a distance of 4210 m. For such a shot it was necessary to take into account a huge number of factors, including the rotation of the Earth - the bullet spent 13 seconds in the air! As the record holder himself said, it took him eight years to achieve this shot. So now the ball is in American territory. Or, more correctly, a bullet.

The world record was set by Russian snipers who hit a target located almost three and a half kilometers away from the firing position. The incredible result is now being called a new victory for domestic weapons and they are even going to submit an application to the Guinness Book of Records. Our field shooting masters beat the previous group record by 100 meters, and the professional sniper record by more than one thousand. On the eve of the anniversary of the Great Victory, they decided to dedicate the achievement to everyone who fought for their Motherland. How this happened is in a special LifeNews report.

The fire experiment took place on the border of the Kaluga and Tula regions near the regional center of Tarusa. It was here that sniper Vladislav Lobaev and his team decided to carry out an ambitious task - to break the world record in rifle shooting.

- This is an exclusive shooting - of a record nature. This is not group shooting - this is shooting to hit, at least one shot,” says Vladislav Lobaev, designer of sniper rifles.

By the way, Vladislav Lobaev himself is an athlete and enjoys long-range shooting. In addition, Lobaev developed the latest sniper rifle, which now bears his name. Several years ago, a man created the first private company in Russia for the serial production of high-precision weapons. After many achievements in the development of weapons, Vlad, one might say, was forced to set a new record - already in sniper business - by the Americans.

We are talking about a video that appeared on the Internet in which four foreign cowboys of advanced age hit a target at a distance of 30 football fields - that’s about three thousand three hundred meters. Among domestic masters, the foreign experiment aroused suspicion and turned into a challenge.

Already here, in Russia, a distance of three thousand four hundred meters is a hundred more than that of the Americans. In other words, the territory for the experiment is comparable to 32 football fields according to FIFA standards. Or a little less than any runway at Domodedovo Airport. And in Moscow itself, this is almost the same distance as from Manezhnaya Square to the Belorussky Station - the entire Tverskaya Street. A rangefinder helped to navigate the countryside. It was with his help that points for the sniper and targets were chosen in the fields.

The main condition of the experiment is the absence of obstacles at the entire distance. Only the field in the Kaluga region turned out to be like this. The target was set three agricultural fields from the firing position. The participants had to get here through plowed soil and mud.

The target itself measures one meter by one meter. The shield was dug right into the remains of last year's hay.

- Mission Impossible. 3400 - simply no one has done it. If this happens, it will be a world record,” says Sergei Parfenov, master of sports in bullet shooting.

In Vladislav’s hands was a complex rifle, the likes of which have no analogues in the world. The sniper created the weapon with his own hands. In total, the athlete has six different models in his weapon range. By the way, this sniper rifle is called “Twilight”. Its caliber is 408 Chey Tac, muzzle velocity is 900 meters per second, length is 1430 millimeters, barrel length is 780 millimeters, weight is more than nine and a half kilograms.

True, to achieve the record, in order to increase the range, the weapon had to be modified: the bar for the sight was increased, the rear part of the barrel was moved higher. In addition, even the bullets had to be loaded with special ones - with a pointed tip that cuts through the air like lightning.

The first few shots were encouraging - although they didn’t hit the target, they definitely caught up with the Americans. And in order to overtake, it seems that all the conditions at the shooting range coincided - sunny weather and even the wind subsides from time to time. After some time, the bullet still pierced the target.

According to Vlad Lobaev, this result is still better than the American one and is worthy even of the Guinness Book of Records. Note that the previous record was set in Afghanistan by professional British military sniper Craig Garrison. In 2010, using an L115A3 Long Range Rifle of 8.59 mm caliber, which has a standard firing range of about 1,100 meters, he hit a target located at a distance of 2.47 kilometers.

His team now expects to enter their names there after conquering the firing line for three and a half kilometers. And on the eve of the anniversary of the Great Victory, they decided to dedicate this record to everyone who fought for their Motherland.



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