[quote]legendaryblaze wrote:
[quote]philipj wrote:
A. You never PULL the trigger. It is always take a deep breath, let it half out, cut it off at the throat, etc etc etc and lastly BEGAIN to press the trigger. The shot going off should ALWAYS be a surprise to you. You will be amazed at how many times you will see game fall if you do it right. Lady friend handed me her scoped rifle and asked me to sight it in, as it had not been fired for years. Three beer cans, three shots and each had a hole in it. Sights were dead on.
That year 13 red squirrels, which she hates as one got in her summer home, died. 13 shells used, zero misses. Just do it right, it helps to be a veteran.[/quote]
Did you even fucking read what I wrote? One of the first things I write is that I squeeze the trigger, not pull. If you want to break an arm jerking yourself off, go do it in GaL.[/quote]
I don’t know if you two have history or not.
For what it is worth nothing phillipj wrote reads like an attack to me.
For some folks the “press” wording is gold, for others “squeeze” is good.
Me, I pull shit towards me and I press shit away from me. So I guess I actually pull triggers. If I do my part the trigger movement doesn’t disturb my aim. Other times I snatch at that damn bangswitch like I was Gollum and it was my falling Precious.
Surprise break is classic marksmanship. Compressed surprise is the “practical”/“Modern Technique”-Jeff Cooper nomenclature for not anticipating, but making the weapon fire NOW.
Trigger weight, type, quality, ect. all change a way triggers “feel” and damn sure make subjective differences. Even if we can all agree what we are actually trying to do.
The weight of the firearm also matters. A light trigger with a heavier gun is going to be more forgiving of accidently putting a little side or down on the “straight to the rear” motion than something like a J-frame where the trigger is 12-14 pounds and the gun weighs 1 pound. Don’t know what those are in Canadian.
Some triggers, like the trigger on a 1911 style pistol, cam straight back and sort of “teach” straight to the rear. This helps a lot. Most triggers hinge at the top and are levers. The longer these are the more they seem to invite a little off line pressure. Heavier exacerbates tendencies. Lighter hides them.
Regards,
Robert A