I took the 3-day Precision Scoped Rifle course at SIG Sauer in Epping, NH this weekend 14-16 Oct 2011. There were seven students and one instructor. The instructor was a former National Guard Sgt with extensive firearms experience who presently works at a defense contractor in NH and is responsible for loads of firearms. He had instructed the course 3 times previously. I would rate him as a very good instructor.
The course appears very basic, assuming little or no knowledge of rifles, scopes or shooting. Three of seven showed up and used loaner rifles (nice SIG TAC-2 rifles and Blasers with Leupold Mark 4 tactical scopes and suppressors). Others came with Savage or Winchester rifles and scopes of varying quality, but none over $1k. I shot a Remington 700P 308 with Bushnell Elite 4200 6-24x40 FFP mil/mil scope and 308SMK 175g Southwest Ammunition match ammo. There was one 300WinMag rifle that was remarkably loud. No muzzle brakes on any rifle, just the loaners with cans on 2 of 3.
It rained all Friday so we spent the day in the classroom. I think most of us were prepared to shoot in the rain but as several came from a distance without much gear, they would have been soaked and hypothermic before noon. The classroom discuss was fairly basic, with most information I had learned from either an Appleseed shoot or general reading on long-range rifle. But the instructor had some good advice and information to add to my collection, so no complaints.
Day 2 was mostly at 100yd, zeroing rifles (mine was 0.2mil high, having switched from Federal 308GMSMK175 to another brand), shooting slow and fast strings, shooting steel and box-testing the scopes (albeit with 4inch boxes). We pulled back to 200yd for a few hours. The class was generally really good, with only a few equipment glitches (one guy had a scope that failed - dropped a part internally that obscured vision, and one SIG loaner scope had only 1 of 2 rings actually secured) - once rectified, we all shooting 4inch groups at 200yd, with many shooting 2inch groups or better. Those $7k SIG/Leupold rifles make it pretty easy!
Day 3 was 100yd, to 200yd, with the last hour at 300yd. Unfortunately, SIG can't shoot before noon Sundays and after 6pm daily, so trigger time was limited. They had a range open to 500yd by blocking roads but due to construction we were limited to 300yd. They have a 1000yd range in progress and plan to open that Spring 2012.
What you get, is good basic instruction. I loosed 190 rounds of the 300 round recommended count. I think we lost some good range time Friday due to the rain. But being a basic course, I can see not putting a newbie in cold rain to zero a rifle for the first time.
What you don't get is much individual evaluation of position and trigger control. Nothing on use of Mil-Dot reticles for range estimation and no shooting at unknown distances. Some had simple crosshair reticles, so they couldn't have managed such work.
I would say it's a decent class for those with little or no scoped rifle experience, as described. When they open the 1000yd range, it will be a better course out to >300yd. Too costly at $600 for what you get, compared to other places, but as they were 30min from home, I'm still happy with what I learned and my performance (best group at 300yd <2inches with a stock rifle).
Next - off to one of those places Jose and others have mentioned for some "real" long distance rifle work!