i quit doing that with captain morgan three years ago. good exercise, though!I bicep lift bottles of bourbon.
murf
i quit doing that with captain morgan three years ago. good exercise, though!I bicep lift bottles of bourbon.
Yes for some people. Not for people that have the basics down solid. Proper sight alignment and trigger control. Your first statement is exactly why my system works. More people shoot your way than my way. The results show it in my experience. But to each his own. Not everybody will agree with me or understand what I am saying. Use what works for you. There is a reason the best target rifles have fast lock times.You can not hold the sights perfectly still on target. Trying to make the gun go off at the instant the sights cross into perfect alignment is the cause of jerking the trigger/sights resulting in a shot off target. Ignore the wobble. You will get a much better result pressing the trigger without disturbing the sights even with the sights not pefectly aligned.
Yes for some people. Not for people that have the basics down solid. Proper sight alignment and trigger control. Your first statement is exactly why my system works. More people shoot your way than my way. The results show it in my experience. But to each his own. Not everybody will agree with me or understand what I am saying. Use what works for you. There is a reason the best target rifles have fast lock times.
The Stan was replaced by manual release aids that have light,crisp pulls and are much more controlled.In other words,the archer is more precise when he's in control of the trigger,but it can get ugly if someone gets a dose of target panic and starts punching the release.No matter what kind of trigger we're using,if the weapon doesn't move as the shot breaks,it's going to be a good shot.
A couple of weeks ago,a friend and I were shooting 22's offhand at 100 yards,and when I made a good shot,I could actually see the bullet go into the target through the scope.If I caught a glimpse of the bullet I guess I was still solidly focused on the target.The rifle I was shooting has a very good two stage trigger,and it helped me get close to the break on the first stage and finish the shot when I was close to on target.A book devoted completely to trigger control would be a thick one with small print,and still wouldn't cover every aspect of it.