I can attest to Drews lesson. Legitimately took my shooting to the next level on my range trips. It really “connects” your brain to your trigger by the end! Take a class from this man!
I watched this video last year when it came out, practiced the principles, and can honestly say this is one of THE best videos to take your shooting to the next level. After applying the concepts here, I have been able to win 5 guns in shooting competitions! I sincerely thank you for this video.
Novice shooter (2,000 rounds). Watched this today before going to the range and decided to give it a go. Wow, such a breakthrough day, hitting one 1 inch circles at 3 yards with the left hand was beyond expectations. It’d probably take me 8,000 + rounds to figure it out on my own. Thank you Sir 👊
I was listening to you and when you said pull the trigger to your elbow that was a great mental breakthrough. I can't wait to take what you taught here to the range for practice!
This is awesome....I learned Western shooting without sights. It taught me to know where the bullet will go based on knowing your gun, barrel orientation and grip. Looking at the target and seeing your barrel with peripheral and knowing it will hit because I knew the gun. Hard to believe and comprehend but the best shooters I've seen don't " aim" their gun, they have a extremely good understanding of barrel orientation and how it effects the shot and hit. No sights, to irons, to red dot. You'll know your gun better than anyone around you. It takes thousand and thousands of rounds which isn't realistic for many ppl now. Glad I was born in the era of sub 1 cent 22 lr on a ranch with Prarie dogs a plenty.
I worked with GCE Marine Infantry as an 8404 Corpsman and outshot my entire battalion and got a case of beer from the RSO. He said he’s never seen a “Doc” shoot so well and made a bet with the other range personnel that if a Corpsman ever out shot the Marines he would buy them a case of beer. That was such an amazing experience and such a fun week. Still have my certificate. Thanks for the inspiration to get back to shooting.
I completely understand what you’re teaching here. Isolating this one piece of the puzzle. Since moving from 1911’s to strikers and now HK’s too I’ve been pulling left. I’ve been drying for a bit now and I already notice I’m not pulling anymore. So I will continue to focus on the isolating the proper knuckle and the pulling into the elbow reference. This was exactly what I needed. As far as the clowns bitching about distance, what gun, off hand positioned on the chest, ROF well apparently they’re Jerry M. Clones and have no more to learn. I was a Fire Captain for twenty years. Even though I was an international instructor I was WISE enough and humble enough to continue learning and growing even when I had reached a high level of execution. Appreciate the video. You got my Sub. 🍻🇺🇸
What you said about trigger pulling reference points hit me like a eureka moment! I never realized I was pulling wrong until I practiced this dry firing. Best video that has ever helped me. Thank you!
This is a very valuable information. Average "beginner" may not understand completely however if you've shot for some time, you will definitely know what he is talking about. Loved the detailed analysis, thank you.
😮 I like the simplicity of this drill as well as the “brain” breakdown as it were. Will definitely be trying this drill at my next opportunity so thanks for posting this and sharing the knowledge
I followed along to the video with a dryfire mag and some dots on my wall. I immediately saw a difference. Made me a bit mad while I was doing this cause everybody who was training me to shoot would just ignore the low left problem. Immediately I saw much less movement in the dot when I pulled back to my elbow. I will 100% be incorporating this next time I shoot.
I have never practiced shooting that close to my target. Figure if i can hit the target at 30 yards i didnt need to practice 5 yards. But watching this drill kinda gives me an idea of how to correct my aim. Def be making this part of my daily mag dumps.
Im a new to shooting. Have been doing it for a little over 3 months now. I do a lot of dry fire as well. So glad I came across your channel! So much helpful information here!! Thank you for sharing all your knowledge!!
Excellent video. 60+ year old Alaska Miner. After work in the mines we would often use our off time shooting or if we were out of meat well u know. It was different back then. All those who read this under 55 realize 65 hits quick you are in your prime enjoy it mix it up so you have time to enjoy it. Great video.
I do this 2 times on range days. 1 in the beginning, then one at the end. Sometimes I use 5 pasters. At first, I was very bad and then started approving well. It became my favorite drill to do.
First time to your channel and so glad it was this video. I will definitely be trying this. Everyone who teaches this drill should either just show your video or watch it enough times to replicate your video because you broke everything down perfectly. Thank you.
First read about this drill in your book. Being a relatively new shooter, I thought my inability to keep my dot from moving on trigger pull was all grip related. I changed my grip several times and thought about buying a different gun. With your trigger pull instruction “wall-elbow” - on MantisX, I went from low 90s dry fire and low 80s (or worse) on live fire to high 90s consistently for both. It has translated to other pistols as well. This was the “cheat code” I was looking for!
I love these trigger isolation drills. I have been doing them for a while but not like this. I'm going to try this one out! Thanks brother for everything you do!
been doing this drill every time i go to the range since i seen this video last year the first time and it helped me a lot with my trigger control. great video. thank you
Actually, very informative and dialed in...this was a good video to watch overall 🙌...this was one of the better videos I have seen in a very long time 🙏
I dig it! A good variant if you were looking to change it up would be to follow up with the same course of fire at 7-10 yards with 2” circles or B8s at 25 yards. Then switch back to the up close work on a 1” pasty at 3-4 yards to finish things off. I find it helpful to my overall confidence as a shooter to scale drills like this to greater distances on similar size/scale targets.
Very good drill. I use something similar, but only with a 2-hand grip at 3 and 5 yards, once in the morning and again in the afternoon to assess improvement over baseline. One thing I teach differently is I say trigger "press". Pretty minor distinction, but this is how I express it: You pull a lawn mower starter rope with your whole body, multiple major muscle groups. You squeeze a lemon with your whole hand. You press a button (trigger) with one finger. Relating the known to the unknown, with a rifle you squeeze the pistol grip and forend with both your whole hands, you pull the rifle into your shoulder with multiple major muscle groups, and you press the trigger with one finger.
Thomas great video. I am 70 and have shot pistol for 55 years. I started shooting bulls eye. Kinda of like shooting you 1 inch square dots. I was taught totally different way back then. No big deal it was about trigger control. One thing in my many years of instructing that I learned with woman more so than men (unless he has small hands) was gun fit. More so length of trigger pull. When the length of pull fits anyone's hand they are forced to pull the trigger straight back. A new shooter has no fundamentals yet. For some one like you that knows all these things, I could put a small framed gun in your hands and you would shoot it well. I could take a large framed gun and and with 3/4" masking tape put 20 /25/30 layers of tape on the back strap making the trigger pull 1/4", 5/16", 3/8" longer and you would shoot it well. I try to stress on my new shooter gun fit, gun fit, gun fit. I always carry 5 or 6 different type of guns to put in there hands , trying to teach good fundamentals. One thing for sure is when any student starts hitting a 1" dot there confidences goes way up. Keep putting out great content. Thanks Rick D.
Had this video saved to watch later for months. Man those were more or less wasted months. Just now watched it and it makes perfect sense. By far one of the most helpful videos I've seen thus far. Thanks @BAERSolutions You gained a subscriber
I just bought your book, Drew. I'm excited to take my shooting to the next level, and to use those skills to help bring new shooters into the fold. Thanks for the information.
Loved that seemless transition back to group mode with the beer brands tangent 🤣🤙. Seriously though, this channel is immensely helpful. Can't wait to add some of these drills to the range repertoire. Thanks for all the great demo and info.
Dude I love you on Shoresy, glad to see you out there training as well! 🤣 All jokes aside, great content, right to the point with no BS. Keep it coming, real valuable stuff! 🤙 🇺🇸
Shiner Bock & Yuengling.... Some of the best stuff on earth. Just got you a new Sub. God Bless Texas and the oldest beer brewing company in America... 🍻
My first thought was, "Why is this guy aiming hard out at a target that big, so close?" Pasters, ok, valid dill. I do a similar thing, but with paper plates at 25 to 35 yards.
This is so helpful. I’m left eye dominant and a right handed shooter. My shots tend to ride mainly to the left. I’m going to try this and let you know how it goes. Thank you for sharing brother.
I’m in the same boat. Right hand and left eye dominant. I am excited to try this drill. I have done pretty well at a “dot torture drill” but I think this would really help me shoot better. Thank you!
I'm happy to reinforce knowledge with a neighbor who also lives in Portland. Grip, control of the trigger, and all the other details that we know, good video, greetings!
The bracketing term made my brain connect to photography concept where u shoot one w higher exposure and one w lower exposure, to find the middle ground - very nice instruction
Great drill, we had an instructor run this with us for a 2day course - really help breakdown how silly your hand was being. Shoutout to Regular Guy Training, Chris is a good instructor. Thanks again for the drill
Seems like a great drill. I was at the range the other day trying to sort out some accuracy issues. Went through a lot of ammo without much improvement and to be honest without much knowledge on how I should be trying to correct things. Next time out I’m giving this a try. Great video, thanks.😬👍
I have never shot 9mm as well as all the other calibers I shoot, regardless of ammo and across five different 9mm pistols. Last autumn, I was shooting double-taps, back three yards, do it again. Thought I was getting unusually excessive drop starting at 18 yards. Distinct drop at 33 yards. Tested that this past week, three different 9mm ammos, shooting from rest. Regardless of ammo, at 36 yds there was EXCESSIVE drop. (Using a compact CC pistol with 3.5" barrel.) "Groups," if you could call them that, were 8" to 12" low, most shots to the left, and some shots more than 24" low. I think 9mm sucks. If you are shooting 9mm and poor accuracy, try another caliber. See if your accuracy is noticeably better. I shoot much better groups and DO NOT get this kind of spread or drop in 40 S&W, 45 acp, 357 SIG, or 357 Magnum. I believe a lot of the blame we put on ourselves is actually due in some significant part due to lousy factory 9mm ammo.
I recently got your book and started using this as my first drill of the day and can honestly say 40% is absolutely a standard for me. Shooting it twice now when I start, one set at 5 yards, one set at 10.
I used this drill the for a LEO firearms class at my agency, and had great reviews from the officers. Thanks for sharing! By the way our BJJ/combatives instructor does the same finger snapping while teaching and is named Ray.
Your videos are top notch in quality and information. I just stumbled across your channel and I subscribed. You should definitely try and collaborate with some other channels and get your name out because you deserve a lot more subscribers for the quality you’re putting out.
Awe man, thanks a bunch! I’ve been trying to improve my 25yd accuracy and the universe sent me this video! Can’t wait to try this on the range tomorrow. Thanks Brah.
So awesome to see the knowledge you have and how well you explain it. To me, it’s almost black magic. But then I remember this is why you’re an expert. When I take people surfing, they think I’m supernatural and can control the waves. Nope. Just done it so long that I’ve got a trained eye for it. Would love to have that natural flow with a handgun in due time.
I love that drill makes all the sense in the world to me I've been thinking of a set up like this and you just did it for me this is what I show my Girl and our kid's. I don't know why I thought I was the only other person that did something like this. Lol GREAT SHOOTING 🔫
This Channel Is Increasingly Becoming Top Tier For Me Even With These 2 Years Old Videos. Amazing Teachings 👏 😊
I can attest to Drews lesson. Legitimately took my shooting to the next level on my range trips. It really “connects” your brain to your trigger by the end! Take a class from this man!
I watched this video last year when it came out, practiced the principles, and can honestly say this is one of THE best videos to take your shooting to the next level. After applying the concepts here, I have been able to win 5 guns in shooting competitions! I sincerely thank you for this video.
Novice shooter (2,000 rounds). Watched this today before going to the range and decided to give it a go. Wow, such a breakthrough day, hitting one 1 inch circles at 3 yards with the left hand was beyond expectations. It’d probably take me 8,000 + rounds to figure it out on my own. Thank you Sir 👊
I was listening to you and when you said pull the trigger to your elbow that was a great mental breakthrough. I can't wait to take what you taught here to the range for practice!
Ditto
I can’t believe I’ve never heard of this guy. That is some pretty awesome instruction. The presentation and explanation was very well done
I just want to say I think you are awesome for sharing this knowledge for free
This is one of the clearest breakdowns of any subject, youre a great teach dude.
This man gives outstanding, systematic training advice. Huge respect.
This is awesome....I learned Western shooting without sights. It taught me to know where the bullet will go based on knowing your gun, barrel orientation and grip. Looking at the target and seeing your barrel with peripheral and knowing it will hit because I knew the gun. Hard to believe and comprehend but the best shooters I've seen don't " aim" their gun, they have a extremely good understanding of barrel orientation and how it effects the shot and hit. No sights, to irons, to red dot. You'll know your gun better than anyone around you. It takes thousand and thousands of rounds which isn't realistic for many ppl now. Glad I was born in the era of sub 1 cent 22 lr on a ranch with Prarie dogs a plenty.
I worked with GCE Marine Infantry as an 8404 Corpsman and outshot my entire battalion and got a case of beer from the RSO. He said he’s never seen a “Doc” shoot so well and made a bet with the other range personnel that if a Corpsman ever out shot the Marines he would buy them a case of beer. That was such an amazing experience and such a fun week. Still have my certificate. Thanks for the inspiration to get back to shooting.
That’s bad ass!
Calling your shots is the key takeaway...Thanks for the tune-up...
I completely understand what you’re teaching here. Isolating this one piece of the puzzle. Since moving from 1911’s to strikers and now HK’s too I’ve been pulling left. I’ve been drying for a bit now and I already notice I’m not pulling anymore.
So I will continue to focus on the isolating the proper knuckle and the pulling into the elbow reference.
This was exactly what I needed.
As far as the clowns bitching about distance, what gun, off hand positioned on the chest, ROF well apparently they’re Jerry M. Clones and have no more to learn. I was a Fire Captain for twenty years. Even though I was an international instructor I was WISE enough and humble enough to continue learning and growing even when I had reached a high level of execution.
Appreciate the video. You got my Sub.
🍻🇺🇸
What you said about trigger pulling reference points hit me like a eureka moment! I never realized I was pulling wrong until I practiced this dry firing. Best video that has ever helped me. Thank you!
Outstanding explanation of this drill. Became an instant subscriber.
This is a very valuable information. Average "beginner" may not understand completely however if you've shot for some time, you will definitely know what he is talking about. Loved the detailed analysis, thank you.
😮 I like the simplicity of this drill as well as the “brain” breakdown as it were. Will definitely be trying this drill at my next opportunity so thanks for posting this and sharing the knowledge
I followed along to the video with a dryfire mag and some dots on my wall. I immediately saw a difference. Made me a bit mad while I was doing this cause everybody who was training me to shoot would just ignore the low left problem. Immediately I saw much less movement in the dot when I pulled back to my elbow. I will 100% be incorporating this next time I shoot.
I have never practiced shooting that close to my target. Figure if i can hit the target at 30 yards i didnt need to practice 5 yards. But watching this drill kinda gives me an idea of how to correct my aim. Def be making this part of my daily mag dumps.
Im a new to shooting. Have been doing it for a little over 3 months now. I do a lot of dry fire as well. So glad I came across your channel! So much helpful information here!! Thank you for sharing all your knowledge!!
Excellent video. 60+ year old Alaska Miner. After work in the mines we would often use our off time shooting or if we were out of meat well u know. It was different back then. All those who read this under 55 realize 65 hits quick you are in your prime enjoy it mix it up so you have time to enjoy it. Great video.
GREAT! This is the type of instruction so lacking in the training world. Thank you and will share!
I do this 2 times on range days. 1 in the beginning, then one at the end. Sometimes I use 5 pasters. At first, I was very bad and then started approving well. It became my favorite drill to do.
This was the single best drill for me in Drew’s class. Excellent teacher and a great guy.
Staying up late tonight - absorbing this to try at the range tomorrow!
Still those groups with one hand is very impressive and direct.
I love these drills, best UA-cam channel for shooters
on the internet
First time to your channel and so glad it was this video. I will definitely be trying this. Everyone who teaches this drill should either just show your video or watch it enough times to replicate your video because you broke everything down perfectly. Thank you.
First read about this drill in your book. Being a relatively new shooter, I thought my inability to keep my dot from moving on trigger pull was all grip related. I changed my grip several times and thought about buying a different gun.
With your trigger pull instruction “wall-elbow” - on MantisX, I went from low 90s dry fire and low 80s (or worse) on live fire to high 90s consistently for both. It has translated to other pistols as well.
This was the “cheat code” I was looking for!
Solid info.
I'm about to run to the range and push for 40% improvement. Thanks dude!
This is fantastic training. It actually gives one the opportunity to feel & see the differences in grip & trigger manipulation.
I love these trigger isolation drills. I have been doing them for a while but not like this. I'm going to try this one out! Thanks brother for everything you do!
been doing this drill every time i go to the range since i seen this video last year the first time and it helped me a lot with my trigger control. great video. thank you
Actually, very informative and dialed in...this was a good video to watch overall 🙌...this was one of the better videos I have seen in a very long time 🙏
Thank you that was awesome. I just had shoulder surgery and Ill be on the mend for 2-3 months, but man I can't wait to give this a go.
Heal up and looking forward to hearing about it.
I dig it! A good variant if you were looking to change it up would be to follow up with the same course of fire at 7-10 yards with 2” circles or B8s at 25 yards. Then switch back to the up close work on a 1” pasty at 3-4 yards to finish things off.
I find it helpful to my overall confidence as a shooter to scale drills like this to greater distances on similar size/scale targets.
I'd been shooting low right as a lefty and this drill fixed my groups almost immediately. Super helpful!
Yuengling number one and your training videos top notch too 👌.
Very good drill. I use something similar, but only with a 2-hand grip at 3 and 5 yards, once in the morning and again in the afternoon to assess improvement over baseline.
One thing I teach differently is I say trigger "press". Pretty minor distinction, but this is how I express it:
You pull a lawn mower starter rope with your whole body, multiple major muscle groups.
You squeeze a lemon with your whole hand.
You press a button (trigger) with one finger.
Relating the known to the unknown, with a rifle you squeeze the pistol grip and forend with both your whole hands, you pull the rifle into your shoulder with multiple major muscle groups, and you press the trigger with one finger.
Thomas great video. I am 70 and have shot pistol for 55 years. I started shooting bulls eye. Kinda of like shooting you 1 inch square dots. I was taught totally different way back then. No big deal it was about trigger control. One thing in my many years of instructing that I learned with woman more so than men (unless he has small hands) was gun fit. More so length of trigger pull. When the length of pull fits anyone's hand they are forced to pull the trigger straight back. A new shooter has no fundamentals yet. For some one like you that knows all these things, I could put a small framed gun in your hands and you would shoot it well. I could take a large framed gun and and with 3/4" masking tape put 20 /25/30 layers of tape on the back strap making the trigger pull 1/4", 5/16", 3/8" longer and you would shoot it well. I try to stress on my new shooter gun fit, gun fit, gun fit. I always carry 5 or 6 different type of guns to put in there hands , trying to teach good fundamentals. One thing for sure is when any student starts hitting a 1" dot there confidences goes way up. Keep putting out great content. Thanks Rick D.
Had this video saved to watch later for months. Man those were more or less wasted months. Just now watched it and it makes perfect sense. By far one of the most helpful videos I've seen thus far. Thanks @BAERSolutions You gained a subscriber
Thanks for the Voight trigger pull trick with the marker.
I just bought your book, Drew. I'm excited to take my shooting to the next level, and to use those skills to help bring new shooters into the fold. Thanks for the information.
Love this drill. It has absolutely taken my shooting to the next level
ABSOLUTELY great instructions thanks . And thank you for your service for our country !!!
Absolutely the best video I have seen with an easy explanation! Thank you sir! I’m a low left shooter!
this is my new warm up drill for team shoots, thank you for sharing
Great Job Bro! I appreciate the straight to business training clip. Its all about knowledge transfer and this was fantastic.
Loved that seemless transition back to group mode with the beer brands tangent 🤣🤙. Seriously though, this channel is immensely helpful. Can't wait to add some of these drills to the range repertoire. Thanks for all the great demo and info.
Dude I love you on Shoresy, glad to see you out there training as well! 🤣
All jokes aside, great content, right to the point with no BS. Keep it coming, real valuable stuff! 🤙 🇺🇸
Excellent drills and warm up
Like this guy, straightforward no BS. I used to do this drill.
Shiner Bock & Yuengling.... Some of the best stuff on earth. Just got you a new Sub.
God Bless Texas and the oldest beer brewing company in America... 🍻
Have you tried yuengling black and tan or their chocolate porter? Sooo good!
there’s a lot of good instructors on UA-cam. But you keep it simple man. Real frank Lol. Great video 🗣
Terrific take on the trigger control issues !!
Looking forward to trying this out. Never learned this training technique before.
My first thought was, "Why is this guy aiming hard out at a target that big, so close?"
Pasters, ok, valid dill.
I do a similar thing, but with paper plates at 25 to 35 yards.
Thanks for this drill bc people can actually do this at an indoor range too.
This is so helpful. I’m left eye dominant and a right handed shooter. My shots tend to ride mainly to the left. I’m going to try this and let you know how it goes. Thank you for sharing brother.
I’m in the same boat. Right hand and left eye dominant. I am excited to try this drill. I have done pretty well at a “dot torture drill” but I think this would really help me shoot better. Thank you!
I'm happy to reinforce knowledge with a neighbor who also lives in Portland. Grip, control of the trigger, and all the other details that we know, good video, greetings!
Did this drill at an Instructor Zee course. It was eye opening and extremely helpful.
The bracketing term made my brain connect to photography concept where u shoot one w higher exposure and one w lower exposure, to find the middle ground - very nice instruction
Good to hear man. I never thought about it in a photography context.
What an awesome video; thank you for both this, and for your service to our communities and to our nation. You are appreciated!
Great instructions...thank you
Thank you for your service and to all patriotic veterans
Great drill, we had an instructor run this with us for a 2day course - really help breakdown how silly your hand was being. Shoutout to Regular Guy Training, Chris is a good instructor. Thanks again for the drill
Seems like a great drill. I was at the range the other day trying to sort out some accuracy issues. Went through a lot of ammo without much improvement and to be honest without much knowledge on how I should be trying to correct things. Next time out I’m giving this a try. Great video, thanks.😬👍
Ditto
I have never shot 9mm as well as all the other calibers I shoot, regardless of ammo and across five different 9mm pistols.
Last autumn, I was shooting double-taps, back three yards, do it again. Thought I was getting unusually excessive drop starting at 18 yards. Distinct drop at 33 yards.
Tested that this past week, three different 9mm ammos, shooting from rest. Regardless of ammo, at 36 yds there was EXCESSIVE drop. (Using a compact CC pistol with 3.5" barrel.)
"Groups," if you could call them that, were 8" to 12" low, most shots to the left, and some shots more than 24" low.
I think 9mm sucks. If you are shooting 9mm and poor accuracy, try another caliber. See if your accuracy is noticeably better.
I shoot much better groups and DO NOT get this kind of spread or drop in 40 S&W, 45 acp, 357 SIG, or 357 Magnum. I believe a lot of the blame we put on ourselves is actually due in some significant part due to lousy factory 9mm ammo.
Definitely gonna try this. Thanks drew
I recently got your book and started using this as my first drill of the day and can honestly say 40% is absolutely a standard for me. Shooting it twice now when I start, one set at 5 yards, one set at 10.
Going to try this next time I'm at the range! Great advice! Yuengling 😁
I appreciate the why to go along with the what to do.
This was very motivating.. I always am looking for good explanations on how to improve basic mechanics and not one really dose that.. thanks.
look like a very good drill to me and the explanations are really clear and logic. thks
As always, great instruction from the Legion. DOL, Brother.
I used this drill the for a LEO firearms class at my agency, and had great reviews from the officers. Thanks for sharing! By the way our BJJ/combatives instructor does the same finger snapping while teaching and is named Ray.
Your videos are top notch in quality and information. I just stumbled across your channel and I subscribed. You should definitely try and collaborate with some other channels and get your name out because you deserve a lot more subscribers for the quality you’re putting out.
Good video. Thanks for the value. Trigger manipulation is my weak point. Got some data to apply.
Holy shit Sherlock. Pull the trigger to my elbow! That's it. That's my problem with rounds going low and inside. I'm pulling the trigger to my thumb!
Right out of the book, explained perfectly!! Going to try tomorrow!! Thanks Drew.
Let us know how it goes.
Used your downloadable target for this before seeing the video. Great to know, brings extreme value to my training! Thank you very much👍🏼
You earned my subscription! Thanks! Im going to range soon and practice this drill
Awe man, thanks a bunch! I’ve been trying to improve my 25yd accuracy and the universe sent me this video! Can’t wait to try this on the range tomorrow. Thanks Brah.
Shiner bock is the best! 👌
Great vid.
Thank you for the information. I always like new information on shooting pistols. And gaining accuracy.
It’s a great drill.. my team uses it often. Thank you
Smooth reload... Buttery.
I always start my range sessions with this drill. I love this drill favorite baer drill
Pull your trigger to your elbow. Never heard that one before! That is a really good tip!
Yes! Simple but crazy powerful mentally.
Works for fixing a slice in golf
Amen on the beer 🍺
I can’t wait to try this drill.
Really good info here. I am practicing the trigger finger pull without bending the entire finger and pullng your shot off center.
So awesome to see the knowledge you have and how well you explain it. To me, it’s almost black magic.
But then I remember this is why you’re an expert. When I take people surfing, they think I’m supernatural and can control the waves. Nope. Just done it so long that I’ve got a trained eye for it.
Would love to have that natural flow with a handgun in due time.
thanks - needed this one
Anxious to try this. What a great explanation on trigger control and how to correct deficiencies!
Let us know what you think.
Excellent video. Valuable information on it. Thanks for shearing.
@BaerSolutions This is great stuff... I'll definitely use this for myself.
I love that drill makes all the sense in the world to me I've been thinking of a set up like this and you just did it for me this is what I show my Girl and our kid's. I don't know why I thought I was the only other person that did something like this. Lol GREAT SHOOTING 🔫
These videos of yours, Drew, are really helpful!