Just felt like adding some extra material for your studies...
I often refer to making the firing of a ten the most natural event you can. The more natural it is to fire a ten, the easier and therefore the more often you will achieve that goal. What is the most natural movement of your trigger finger in firing a gun? Believe it, or not, the most natural is a continuous contraction of your finger to the point of ignition. Sounds a lot like the definition of a good trigger operation, doesn't it? The troubles come in when we try to improve on the natural operation of our finger movement due to outside factors, the main one being our visual criticism. Those who have followed my other posts will see where I'm headed, but I'll go into more detail here as well. How can we determine our most natural finger movement, free from undue influence?
Well, first we must remove the "real time" critique. This will be only temporary while we establish the most natural procedure for our trigger process. The first step is to make sure your gun is totally unloaded and ready to dry fire. In fact, make sure there isn't any ammunition around. Still, remember to keep the gun pointed in a safe direction. Locate a chair where you can sit with the gun held properly with your shooting hand and pointed in a safe direction. Again, check that it is free of ammunition. Now, set it up for a dry fire shot, and with it comfortable in your lap, look at where it is pointed, instead of the gun itself. Operate the trigger in a determined, start to finish, smooth manner. Do this about a dozen times and then start to recognize the time it takes from start to "click." You have now established your natural trigger operation, free from most interference. You still may have some residual mental reservations which may slow it from the truly natural state, but for now it's close enough. After you've established your natural trigger procedure, especially noting its duration, you will have a better test platform for determining your finger (and maybe grip) placement.
Now, you can add the sights back in. When you do, remember to work with the same "natural" trigger procedure you established, but now that you have sights, observe what they do, and experiment with all the factors from the other messages to make them what you want to see. Make changes
between shots instead of
during shots.
Why do I put so much emphasis on a natural trigger? Because, the more natural, the easier to be consistent. We all agree that consistency is good, right? And, the less natural, the more interruptions we may be hiding. If your trigger operation is slloooww, it may quite possibly be covering up lots of hesitations, due to our critique telling us to "fix" something that is deteriorating in our sight picture. If this is the case, the common tendency is to stop-fix-continue, stop-fix-continue, etc. You can recognize this if you know what your natural trigger operation is, because the stop-fix-continue operation takes longer.
So, equipped with your knowledge of what your own natural trigger operation is like, you can
observe your effect on the sights and make adjustments
between dry fire shots, instead of
during dry fire shots. I like to refer to the sighting system as a "trigger purity indicator." But, you should use them to observe, not to infuence, the operation of the trigger while it is underway.
All comments always welcomed...
Take Care,
Ed Hall
http://www.airforceshooting.org/
http://www.starreloaders.com/edhall/