what's the technique for follow-through on a heavy recoiler?
Not dropping the rifle is an excellent first step. Then wipe the snot off of the stock and shoot again.
what's the technique for follow-through on a heavy recoiler?
Not dropping the rifle is an excellent first step. Then wipe the snot off of the stock and shoot again.![]()
I'll take the opposite approach. Shoot something really big to reset what your idea of recoil is. When you find out what won't kill you, things like a .300 actually start to be a lot of fun. A box of 12 gauge 3" puts a few shots out a deer rifle into perspective, and African style recoil makes everything else seem tame or even fun.
If you already have a flinch, it won't make it any worse if this technique doesn't work.
The only problem this leaves me with is that each time I want to learn how to shoot one rifle, I need to buy another
I coach and also have been fortunate to have been coached by a world/olympic class coach, and some of the techniques mentioned above work, and some don't work very quickly.
Here is a great tip. Don't BLINK....
Shooting air rifle offhand, my groups were starting to open up slightly, couldn't figure out why until the coach watched me. Turns out I was blinking during the shot which was causing me to flinch ever so slightly. Concentrated on not blinking, and it worked wonders.
This was with a target CO2 air rifle with a very light trigger, so no recoil and no heavy trigger pull. So much for theory that shooting a light calibre, light trigger, or dry firing will rid of a finch. Yes it might have "gone away" by itself, after many months of practice, but 5 minutes with a very experienced coach put me on the right track instantly.
BTW, this was in addition to all the other proper techniques, such as breathing, posture, trigger control, grip, etc.
I'm sure this is not the best method but when target shooting I pull the trigger very slowly so the shot takes me by surpise and therefore no flinch.
what's the technique for follow-through on a heavy recoiler?
follow-through is the same for all cals.
When you pull the trigger the natural thing your finger wants to do is bounce back off the trigger. You dont want this to happen. Your finger should not be squeezing the trigger after but just holding it in place. As well after you fire you want to put the crosshairs back on target. This will help you get the right body poshion. if its hard every time to get the crosshairs on than adjust your self.
Your concentration sould be focused on the target, not people watching you shoot or your last shot that you just pulled. only on whats happening right now.
I disagree. Recoil has nothing to do with trigger pull.
Heavy recoil lifts the muzzle (and sights) so fast there's no way one could follow the muzzle-blaze. Also called follow-through.
I shoot pretty accurately (read sub MOA) but after each shot I lose the target completely.
I wish I could be back on target in no time but it just doesn't happen.
I remember having the same problem 25 years ago (in the military).