USPSA A-Class Production shooter here. I shoot G34 and have done this drill 1,000s of times over a 3 year period and have broken a firing pin doing this drill. I’d recommend to use a dummy round that has that rubber primer to hit the firing pin on. The tiny portion of the firing pin tip that comes out of the hole sheered clean off.
The camera angle in the red dot window is epic stuff. Looking forward to more of this serious Thanks for the diagnostics ! Real helpful. Any thoughts on horizontal deviation to the right? Trying to clean that up in my dryfire (Right handed shooter)
Do you grip using opposing forces on the gun (such as push-pull or flaring your elbows to pinch the gun)? To me, it sounds like you are using too much force with your left hand and thus pushing the gun to the right. Similarly, it could be from pulling the trigger with your whole hand, vs just moving the finger. It's impossible to tell from text alone, but if you focus on isolating your finger's motion and maintaining even grip pressure, you should see improvement.
@@Modern_Warrior_School appreciate the reply ! No opposing forces, just a c-clamp After playing around a bit more with the drill my dominant hand was a bit more relaxed during dryfire. Cuppled with a slight pull with my trigger press. This drill definitely helped me spot it, sort it out with some help and confirming in LiveFire
@@JustinV911 Glad you were able to get yourself squared away. Being able to read your sights and self diagnose like that is essential, so good on you for even noticing. Many shooters wouldn't. I also like how you meaned verifying with live fire which is another thing people forget - even with a good dry fire regimen.
This is a dry subject but an important part of training.
USPSA A-Class Production shooter here. I shoot G34 and have done this drill 1,000s of times over a 3 year period and have broken a firing pin doing this drill. I’d recommend to use a dummy round that has that rubber primer to hit the firing pin on. The tiny portion of the firing pin tip that comes out of the hole sheered clean off.
Loving this dry fire series man! I greatly appreciate the knowledge transfer. Hope this series continues.
Always love your content, drop videos more often please & Where can I buy those small cardboard targets on your wall?
You can get them on Amazon or Ben steoger pro shop
Cardboard man, just cut them out 😂
👍
The camera angle in the red dot window is epic stuff.
Looking forward to more of this serious
Thanks for the diagnostics ! Real helpful.
Any thoughts on horizontal deviation to the right? Trying to clean that up in my dryfire
(Right handed shooter)
Do you grip using opposing forces on the gun (such as push-pull or flaring your elbows to pinch the gun)? To me, it sounds like you are using too much force with your left hand and thus pushing the gun to the right. Similarly, it could be from pulling the trigger with your whole hand, vs just moving the finger. It's impossible to tell from text alone, but if you focus on isolating your finger's motion and maintaining even grip pressure, you should see improvement.
@@Modern_Warrior_School appreciate the reply ! No opposing forces, just a c-clamp
After playing around a bit more with the drill my dominant hand was a bit more relaxed during dryfire. Cuppled with a slight pull with my trigger press.
This drill definitely helped me spot it, sort it out with some help and confirming in LiveFire
@@JustinV911 Glad you were able to get yourself squared away. Being able to read your sights and self diagnose like that is essential, so good on you for even noticing. Many shooters wouldn't. I also like how you meaned verifying with live fire which is another thing people forget - even with a good dry fire regimen.
Giggidy.
Found the spec 9mm rounds. You mentioned a friend did the 556 ones. Any commercial source?
@@todddunn584 not that I'm aware of