I try to learn something new every time I go shooting. For the life of me today I didn't know why I was shooting low and to the left. After research, I believe I was anticipating the recoil. This pistol is great, but it does pack a punch, and it takes some time to get used to the feel of a 10mm recoil. Taurus has a great handgun in the TH10, and if you are looking for a 10mm, this one will not disappoint.
I will offer this: I trained a LEO candidate having a tough time qualifying with his 9mm service pistol, for the same reason - in fact, getting on the paper at all. A loose and improper grip was his problem. I trained him with a .40 S&W Taurus G2c, which has a rough grip texture that is excellent for consistency. I had him rotate the grip clockwise into his thumb muscle, push the grip against the thumb web of his hand, and reach aggressively beneath the trigger guard with his 3 lower fingers and grip tightly, embedding the grip texture in the fingers. That stretched the palm skin and 'locked" the grip, under friction and recoil, in the same position shot-shot. Neither firing nor trigger pull moved the grip whatsoever in his hand, ensuring consistency. He was immediately in the black with the .40 despite his past inability with his heavier, but more smoothly-gripped, softly-held, and lower-recoiling 9mm. He changed his grip on the 9 and improved. I believe he later added Talon grip wrap to match the aggressive and excellent Taurus grip texture. He qualified. The gun and your hand and arm have to be fused for consistency, otherwise the trigger is a lever that precesses the muzzle off the line of aim when pulled - particularly if you are not pulling straight back, which most people are not, nor pulling with the fingertip because of the mechanical advantage of using the first finger joint or second finger segment. That pulls the gun out of alignment to the right, and when the trigger breaks, the muzzle swings left, and the bullet hits low and left. FWIW; YMMV.
One thing a lot of Taurus owners don't know is that if you get on the Taurus web page and start looking you can buy spare parts and sometimes magazines and so forth. No need to use aftermarket junk IF you can get genuine Taurus parts and mags. I bought a spare 9MM barrel for $59 and got fast shipping and a fair price for freight.
When watching you shoot and you went to shoot again after you shot the last round I seen what you were talking about anticipating The Recoil when you went to pull the trigger you can see where you were pulling down and to the left specifically at the 8-minute 36-second mark
All shooters will shoot LOW/LEFT..... But TAURUS is totally 180° from what they used to be & REGARDLESS OF WHAT PEOPLE SAY!!!! They are one of the Top preforming Handguns of today!!! Haven't saw a bad Review yet & ive seen AT LEAST 20
try squeezing the trigger and use follow through. it will help you accuracy. Squeeze it like you're squeezing one dropout of an eye dropper and hold the trigger to the. Rear until you're back on target
You can't go wrong with Taurus. They are lifetime guaranteed even if you buy a used Taurus. Any issues you have with a Taurus they will work it out with you. They have great customer service.
I'm glad u said that , I've seen some ammo jams on the videos , they say usually a heavier spring will take care of that. And I love the looks of the gun. Thank you 👍🇺🇸
Any problems with the mag release? Other videos I've watched more than not have mentioned this issue. I have a TH10, I have to push and hold the magazine in the mag well firmly to release the mag.
I try to learn something new every time I go shooting. For the life of me today I didn't know why I was shooting low and to the left. After research, I believe I was anticipating the recoil. This pistol is great, but it does pack a punch, and it takes some time to get used to the feel of a 10mm recoil. Taurus has a great handgun in the TH10, and if you are looking for a 10mm, this one will not disappoint.
I will offer this: I trained a LEO candidate having a tough time qualifying with his 9mm service pistol, for the same reason - in fact, getting on the paper at all. A loose and improper grip was his problem. I trained him with a .40 S&W Taurus G2c, which has a rough grip texture that is excellent for consistency.
I had him rotate the grip clockwise into his thumb muscle, push the grip against the thumb web of his hand, and reach aggressively beneath the trigger guard with his 3 lower fingers and grip tightly, embedding the grip texture in the fingers. That stretched the palm skin and 'locked" the grip, under friction and recoil, in the same position shot-shot.
Neither firing nor trigger pull moved the grip whatsoever in his hand, ensuring consistency. He was immediately in the black with the .40 despite his past inability with his heavier, but more smoothly-gripped, softly-held, and lower-recoiling 9mm. He changed his grip on the 9 and improved. I believe he later added Talon grip wrap to match the aggressive and excellent Taurus grip texture. He qualified.
The gun and your hand and arm have to be fused for consistency, otherwise the trigger is a lever that precesses the muzzle off the line of aim when pulled - particularly if you are not pulling straight back, which most people are not, nor pulling with the fingertip because of the mechanical advantage of using the first finger joint or second finger segment. That pulls the gun out of alignment to the right, and when the trigger breaks, the muzzle swings left, and the bullet hits low and left. FWIW; YMMV.
Nice gun. Thanks for the video. Yes it’s hard not to flinch with 10mm.
One thing a lot of Taurus owners don't know is that if you get on the Taurus web page and start looking you can buy spare parts and sometimes magazines and so forth. No need to use aftermarket junk IF you can get genuine Taurus parts and mags. I bought a spare 9MM barrel for $59 and got fast shipping and a fair price for freight.
May have to grab one for a truck gun. Love 10mm I've got 3 glock 10mm 2 Springfield a colt delta and m&p 10mm
I'd love to see a follow up with hard cast. Preferably Underwood or Federal Solid Core 200 grain hard cast
I think the Underwood would be much smoother personally
When watching you shoot and you went to shoot again after you shot the last round I seen what you were talking about anticipating The Recoil when you went to pull the trigger you can see where you were pulling down and to the left specifically at the 8-minute 36-second mark
Yes. Always good to keep learning
All shooters will shoot LOW/LEFT..... But TAURUS is totally 180° from what they used to be & REGARDLESS OF WHAT PEOPLE SAY!!!! They are one of the Top preforming Handguns of today!!! Haven't saw a bad Review yet & ive seen AT LEAST 20
Agree! 👍
I thought about getting a membership at The Range in Jackson.
This would make a good hunting handgun when they come out with a optic cut version
try squeezing the trigger and use follow through. it will help you accuracy. Squeeze it like you're squeezing one dropout of an eye dropper and hold the trigger to the. Rear until you're back on target
Nice review. Thank you for the video!! 👍
Thanks for watching!
You can't go wrong with Taurus. They are lifetime guaranteed even if you buy a used Taurus. Any issues you have with a Taurus they will work it out with you. They have great customer service.
I'm glad u said that , I've seen some ammo jams on the videos , they say usually a heavier spring will take care of that. And I love the looks of the gun. Thank you 👍🇺🇸
Any problems with the mag release? Other videos I've watched more than not have mentioned this issue. I have a TH10, I have to push and hold the magazine in the mag well firmly to release the mag.
A little yes
So far , 3 of 7 videos have had ammo jams ??
Q tal fierro
What ammo, were you shooting ❓
Ammo Inc
$500 to $550..nice.
They're selling in the low to mid $400 range.
I thought Jim Gaffigan hated guns?!
Its over priced is the only issue
I’ve seen it down now to like 460
They're selling well below MSRP. It's a good price for a DA/SA 10mm.