Today I put the Riton Seven Conquer 3-24x56 to the test with a true tracking evaluation in both elevation and windage. No marketing hype—just dialing, shooting, measuring, and verifying results on target.
A scope can have crystal-clear glass and great features, but if it doesn’t return to zero or track accurately, none of that matters when distance starts increasing.
In this video, I’ll walk through the process, show the target data, and demonstrate whether the Seven Conquer delivers repeatable adjustments when it matters most.
Have you tested your optic’s tracking lately? Let me know what scope you’re running and how it performed.
Triple A Coach LLC
Triple A Coach is a company dedicated to bringing Colorado citizens great firearms training for defense, competition, hunting and any lawful purpose!
Owned By a Former Green Beret.
Here’s an Instagram caption that fits your Tactical Games training theme and your upcoming Idaho skirmish:
The work doesn’t stop just because the event is still weeks away.
Every rep, every mile, every sandbag carry, and every drop of sweat is another investment toward the goal. Idaho is next for a Tactical Games Skirmish, and after that it’s straight to the Regional. The objective remains the same: show up stronger, move faster, shoot better, and compete against the standard—not the competition.
Success on game day is built long before the start signal. It’s built in the workouts nobody sees, the dry fire sessions, the range days, and the commitment to keep pushing when it would be easier not to.
Idaho Skirmish first. Idaho Regional next. Let’s get to work.
Nebraska was a success, but the work isn’t done.
While teaching Tactical Hyve Cheat Codes of Shooting™ 1, I still made time to get a 3-mile run in. Consistency matters. The next goal is already on the horizon.
Three weeks until the Idaho Regional Tactical Games.
Every run, every dry-fire session, every workout, and every round fired between now and then is another opportunity to improve. Looking forward to testing myself against some of the best athletes and shooters in the country.
See you in Idaho in 3 weeks.
Practical shooting is more than just pulling the trigger — it’s about efficient movement, clean entries, controlled exits, target transitions, and maintaining accountability for every round fired. Train with purpose. Move with intent. Accuracy first, speed second.
Today’s focus:
• Entries into position
• Explosive but controlled movement
• Fast target acquisition
• Efficient exits without sacrificing stability
Whether you compete in Practical Shooting, train for personal defense, or want to improve overall gun handling, mastering movement is a game changer.
Train smart. Stay accountable. Build capability.
Multiple target engagements are not just about speed — they’re about efficiency, vision, and accountability for every round fired.
CLEA:
• Call your shot
• Lead with your eyes
• Exit the original target quickly
• Assess the second target
Your eyes should arrive before the firearm. Your transitions should be deliberate, controlled, and repeatable. Accuracy under time matters.
Train with purpose. Build efficiency. Stay accountable for every hit.
Awkward positions behind cover expose weaknesses fast.
Your optic matters when your body can’t get into a perfect stance. Whether you’re forced low, leaning hard around cover, or shooting from unconventional angles, the fundamentals still apply: sight picture, stability, and accountability for every round.
Train beyond the flat range.
Train to adapt.
Train to solve problems.
A quality optic helps you process information faster and stay target focused when things get uncomfortable. That’s where performance starts to separate itself.
Most people think they can shoot… until the standards change.
50 yards.
9.5x13.5 inch target.
10 shots.
One hand only.
Strong hand only.
No excuses.
No support hand.
No “good enough.”
How many can YOU hit? 🎯
The goal isn’t perfection. The goal is accountability, fundamentals, and control under pressure. Grip, trigger press, sight accountability, and follow through matter more than fancy gear ever will.
Run the drill honestly and post your results.
What Can Your $3,000 Pistol Do That My $500 Pistol Can’t? Those who have $3,000 pistols and can “air rack”…
That’s great and all. It looks cool.
And yes… that’s sarcasm.
But do they actually understand the fundamentals?
More importantly, can they truly teach if they claim to be an instructor?
Owning an expensive pistol does NOT automatically make someone:
• a good shooter
• a good instructor
• or even safe
You still have to train.
Grip. Trigger control. Sight picture. Recoil management. Safety. Consistency under pressure.
You should be able to do with a $500 pistol nearly everything you can do with a $3,000 pistol. The expensive gun should ENHANCE skill that already exists — not replace it.
Because if there’s no skill to enhance, then all you really have is an expensive paperweight waiting to happen.
Train harder than you flex.
Shooting through barriers isn’t just about making hits — it’s about understanding angles, pe*******on, cover vs concealment, and most importantly SAFETY.
Every round has a responsibility attached to it. Train smart. Think before you press the trigger.
Today’s work focused on:
• Proper barrier positioning
• Muzzle awareness
• Understanding what rounds do after impact
• Using cover effectively instead of relying on concealment
Train hard. Stay safe. Build capability the right way.
Second overall and first in the Men’s 40+ division at the Colorado Tactical Games Skirmish. Solid day of work, solid competition, and a good reminder that consistency in training matters.
Ran the match with the Riton setup and everything performed exactly how I needed it to under pressure. Grateful for the opportunity to compete alongside some hard chargers and push myself against strong athletes and shooters.
Now it’s back to training, refining weaknesses, and preparing for the next one.
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