ERRANT NINE O'ClOCK HITS?
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ERRANT NINE O'ClOCK HITS?
I will peek through my spotting scope in order to observe and check my progress. All of the hits are in the X and Ten Rings. After the second
string is fired, two hits just barely made it into the 9 Ring. Both of them are at the far, nine o'clock location. The other three are in the center
of the bullseye. According to the guide above, "Too much or too little trigger finger" is the cause of those two errant hits. How can this be? I do
believe that this is not a case of inconsistent trigger finger placement. When positioned on the trigger prior to the start of the string, my finger
seems to be staying in the same spot. If this is true, then what is causing those stray impacts? Did the size of my wobble area suddenly increase
during the string? What else might be causing this to happen? Do note that I am right handed. Thank you!
Re: ERRANT NINE O'ClOCK HITS?
Pretty well everyone does this in timed fire in all matches.
I believe it comes down to how you use your trigger finger
Pulling the trigger directly backwards is a complex movement for multiple joints - which are operated my multiple overlapping muscles and tendons - it takes willpower to do this.
Slapping the trigger to the left is not nearly as difficult, anyone can do this with ease.
What you can do.
Get your grip right - most grips are wrong - the thumb should point at the target, not off to the left.
Set your finger on the trigger correctly.
Focus on pulling the trigger directly backwards - imagine you're pulling the foresight straight back to your eye.
Hire someone to stand behind you and give you a mild tazing each time you pull a 9 o'clock 9
I believe it comes down to how you use your trigger finger
Pulling the trigger directly backwards is a complex movement for multiple joints - which are operated my multiple overlapping muscles and tendons - it takes willpower to do this.
Slapping the trigger to the left is not nearly as difficult, anyone can do this with ease.
What you can do.
Get your grip right - most grips are wrong - the thumb should point at the target, not off to the left.
Set your finger on the trigger correctly.
Focus on pulling the trigger directly backwards - imagine you're pulling the foresight straight back to your eye.
Hire someone to stand behind you and give you a mild tazing each time you pull a 9 o'clock 9