I think it was somewhere on this forum that I saw a thread titled something like "pulling trigger better than squeezing". I never read it, but can't locate it now. Can anyone direct me to it?
Thanks.
Thanks.
The trigger pull must be subconscious. One shot at a time !! You need to train for that...the actual shot should be a surprise every time. It's not taking ten shots in a row it's about taking one shot ten times. (school trained shooter here)
Then of you gotta back it up with a un flinching follow through..The trigger pull must be subconscious. One shot at a time !! You need to train for that
Jeff Cooper's philosophy... Old and dated but was one of my gurus when I got into shooting. RegardsNever pull the trigger inadvertently it'll cause you to jerk the gun one way or the other. Always steady squeeze the actual shot should be a surprise every time. It's not taking ten shots in a row it's about taking one shot ten times. (school trained shooter here)
Hahaha trained for years tested, got tested on the battle fieldThe trigger pull must be subconscious. One shot at a time !! You need to train for that
100000% amazing video. Jumping the round I think is a term is common when you anticipate your shot. Now I’ve trained in both combat shooting. In combat shooting accuracy by volume in close quarters. Watch your shots then move. Like he said combat shooting your doing the fundlements but instead of zoning in to get that rear and front a lot of times it’s faster to use move your front sight shoot (point of aim point of impact) now if you’re a designated marksmen or a sniper it’s a little bit of a different story because your shots are more precise and slower (sometimes lol) but in FT shooting you should always be going slow. Slow is smooth smooth is fast if that makes sense. I can do 10 shots in less than 10 seconds and hit center mass on a 26 by 18 inch target at 300 yards (in the sitting) not bench but actually Indian style sitting.. I can hit less than a 10 inch 10 shot group at 500 yards with a 2 MOA rifle.Jeff Cooper's philosophy... Old and dated but was one of my gurus when I got into shooting. Regards