Any tips for recoil management in those large guns? You said you absorb it with your body.
I have a 9mm but I'm interested in a hand cannon. What should I know first? I don't want to end up like your uncle with broken wrists.
Not meaning to derail/hijack, but you seem like someone who might have some information.
I might get corrected on this, but this is what I have developed over the years. Never really been taught the "proper" way, just what works for me. I shoot with a modified Weaver style (If I had to give it a name), not the isosceles style (which absorbs recoil in the elbows to the body). I lock out my elbow and wrist on my shooting hand. I let my arm become an extension of the gun. When the muzzle flip occurs, I let my whole arm go up with it, which surprisingly lessens the return. I let the recoil push my arm back to my shoulder allowing the recoil to be absorbed by my body . I let my hips bend with the recoil and my shoulder bend with the muzzle flip. Other than that I have everything locked out. Not sure if that is the best way, but that is the way I do it. Here is a little polymer 357 which has lots of muzzle flip. You can see what I am talking about a little better. The gun is a Taurus Protector Poly with a 2" barrel shooting full juiced 357s.
I am shooting single action for fun, but when I shot double action with this little gun, I can get back on target pretty quick. This, along with a Ruger LCR poly 357 (among others) is my conceal carry gun.
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My point is that a girl was killed on a range in the states doing exactly what you and your wife were doing...the major difference is that you're wife was handling the recoil...the girl couldn't. Again, my words of warning against handing an inexperienced shooter, or one of a petite frame one of these guns with houseloads+ is stupid, it is not funny, and it can be fatal to either the shooter or others at the range. Your wife can handle the gun and load, and you had no concern, great, fine! That is not the case with everyone...why not start with 1 in the cylinder and KNOW that the individual can handle the gun+ it's load rather than assuming everything will be fine?






















