I have a new gadget that I think bullseye shooter will like but I want to ask the forum. I put motion sensors into standard magazines and wrote a program to track the motion of the gun as the trigger is pulled. I can measure the minor twitches VERY accurately and display what the motion of the gun looks like over time.
I came up with the system to train new shooters in marksmanship but I suspect that competitive shooters will like it.
By the way, it works for both dry-fire and live fire.
Let me know if this is something that you would be interested in seeing sold.
New Trigger Pull Training Device
Moderators: pilkguns, m1963, Isabel1130
New Trigger Pull Training Device
- Attachments
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- Motion of the impact point during a trigger pull at 25 yards.
- Gun Motion.jpg (25.77 KiB) Viewed 3527 times
Theoretically it is accurate to 1" at 25 yards but in practice I am at 2.5". That means that my program predicts the impact point by measuring the motion of the gun during the trigger pull and where it says you will hit is within 2.5" of where the bullet does hit. I can make it MUCH more accurate but the sensors get really expensive. I am looking at selling a complete system for around $300 and some of the nice sensors are $10K.
The program I wrote shows the chart I posted along with a ring target that I plot the impact point on. I also mark the center of the grouping and calculate the group diameter.
It is as easy as dry-fire training. The only trick is to turn the gun on it's side or point it down between shots. This prevents false readings between shots. I call it the anti-gangsta feature!
I have an amateur website at www.StutzTech.com but I am working on building a separate website for it.
The program I wrote shows the chart I posted along with a ring target that I plot the impact point on. I also mark the center of the grouping and calculate the group diameter.
It is as easy as dry-fire training. The only trick is to turn the gun on it's side or point it down between shots. This prevents false readings between shots. I call it the anti-gangsta feature!
I have an amateur website at www.StutzTech.com but I am working on building a separate website for it.
That's a good question. I can show any length of time you want but the reason I chose .25 seconds because all of the errors from the trigger pull is in that time. Before the final trigger pull the gun moves around a little as you breath and I can even see your pulse sometimes but those errors go away in the final trigger pull. It is the final squeeze that things seem to go bad.
I can do 9mm and bigger. I know a lot of you guys use .22 but .22 short is too small. I haven't tried .22 long yet, I'll take a look.
I can do 9mm and bigger. I know a lot of you guys use .22 but .22 short is too small. I haven't tried .22 long yet, I'll take a look.
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