Red Light and little bell
Moderators: pilkguns, m1963, David Levene, Spencer, Richard H
Red Light and little bell
. As soon as the " optimum " time to release the shot is passed... and one retains the sight picture... as the aim begins to falter and the breath hold becomes burdensome... some red light and a little bell ring somewhere in the depths of the mind.... Ignoring them invariably results in a bad shot...
One should 'learn' to see the red light coming up and the little bell's faint ringing far away in the depths of ones consciousnes and ' Abort ' the shot and start over after a suitable interval .
Am I the only one who hears bells and sees little red lights ? or are there others on here who share this experience ?
Elmas
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One should 'learn' to see the red light coming up and the little bell's faint ringing far away in the depths of ones consciousnes and ' Abort ' the shot and start over after a suitable interval .
Am I the only one who hears bells and sees little red lights ? or are there others on here who share this experience ?
Elmas
.
- Fred Mannis
- Posts: 1298
- Joined: Sun Aug 29, 2004 8:37 pm
- Location: Delaware
When to Abort?
I hear a loud voice shouting in my ear: STOP :-)
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- Posts: 63
- Joined: Sun Apr 02, 2006 4:08 am
TargetShootingShop.com wrote:I usually hear a voice shouting at me too, but invariably calling me names like w@nk3r, d1ckhe@d, etc etc
Such shots usually end up in the 9 ring too.
Good for you that your 'unconscious' responds positively to abuse...
Did you read what someone recently posted about how he timed Skanaker at a match on a hold for eleven seconds ( which ended up a ten) and another longer hold of , I think , 28 secs ! which also ended up a ten. To me, this proves that there are exceptions to every rule ! and that Ragnar Skanakar was one of the great shots in FP and AP .
Elmas
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