The Marines refer to the site on an M-16 as an "onion ring and fry." The idea is that you want the "fry" to bisect the length of the "onion ring" through the radius, setting your radius upon your target. We had a briefing on this that was very specific about the analogy (As an aside, it seems the Marines begin every brief with a history lesson, underscoring that every Marine should know his history. That reason contributes to why Marines carry themselves so well. They know where they came from).Every Marine is first a rifleman, so each Marine is expected to qualify as a riflemen. We were taken into a rifle simulation room where there was a platform holding rifles and magazines at one end of the room and a screen at the other end. The screen projected four targets, with circles on the target where the heart and head should be (Four people at a time could shoot. The rifles and magazines communicate with sensors the hits on the target). We were taught the "Groucho" stance and were instructed to raise the rifle halfway, then full on the target, aim, and then shoot.
The Marines refer to the site on an M-16 as an "onion ring and fry." The idea is that you want the "fry" to bisect the length of the "onion ring" through the radius, setting your radius upon your target. We had a briefing on this that was very specific about the analogy (As an aside, it seems the Marines begin every brief with a history lesson, underscoring that every Marine should know his history. That reason contributes to why Marines carry themselves so well. They know where they came from).Every Marine is first a rifleman, so each Marine is expected to qualify as a riflemen. We were taken into a rifle simulation room where there was a platform holding rifles and magazines at one end of the room and a screen at the other end. The screen projected four targets, with circles on the target where the heart and head should be (Four people at a time could shoot. The rifles and magazines communicate with sensors the hits on the target). We were taught the "Groucho" stance and were instructed to raise the rifle halfway, then full on the target, aim, and then shoot.