James, do you prefer (or have an opinion on) rifle handgrips that are straight vertical vs those that are more pistol grip-shaped? I've noticed that on some ELR chassis. They have a handgrip that's exactly straight up and down, with no taper or ergonomic shaping.
I was taught to barely squeeze until it breaks and it should surprise you. If I do that, I cannot hold trigger squeeze. The recoil gun leaves my finger and breaks contact so I cannot continue squeeze like you do. Are you lightly increasing your squeeze or just squeezing quickly once your ready? Only way I can continue squeeze is by squeezing much faster and firmer than I was taught.
I was practicing with an air rifle a few years ago and tried this. I was taught in school to follow through your shot in basketball. Thinking similar I tried this technique. It really made a difference. I now use it with my powder burners. I called it Trigger Follow Through. Even comes in to play with pistol shooting. When checking or shooting for accuracy and for finding trigger reset .
Appreciate your content James.
Nothing to discuss:just observing and listening and learning-thanks for sharing!
New sub here , im only uk airrifle enthusiast but summilar principals , thanks for your vids
Great video
Interesting how just a simple way of holding the bag can affect impact. Thanks for the tip sir!
James, do you prefer (or have an opinion on) rifle handgrips that are straight vertical vs those that are more pistol grip-shaped? I've noticed that on some ELR chassis. They have a handgrip that's exactly straight up and down, with no taper or ergonomic shaping.
Great tips presented clearly in under 5 minutes!👏🏻 Thanks!
I was taught to barely squeeze until it breaks and it should surprise you. If I do that, I cannot hold trigger squeeze. The recoil gun leaves my finger and breaks contact so I cannot continue squeeze like you do. Are you lightly increasing your squeeze or just squeezing quickly once your ready? Only way I can continue squeeze is by squeezing much faster and firmer than I was taught.
Are you pulling the rifle back with you hand? If I'm holding the rifle too lightly then I've experienced the trigger jumping off of my finger too.
I was practicing with an air rifle a few years ago and tried this. I was taught in school to follow through your shot in basketball. Thinking similar I tried this technique. It really made a difference. I now use it with my powder burners. I called it Trigger Follow Through. Even comes in to play with pistol shooting. When checking or shooting for accuracy and for finding trigger reset .
grest!
Great video