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Thread: Trigger Control: Mastering The Mechanics Of A Precision Press

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    GunNutz 1ABNDT's Avatar
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    Trigger Control: Mastering The Mechanics Of A Precision Press

    https: //gundigest.com/article/trigger-control-mastering-the-mechanics-of-a-precision-press


    Of all the fundamentals of precision marksmanship, trigger control is among the most weighty for consistent and accurate shooting.

    What Are The Finger Mechanics Behind Trigger Control:
    The trigger shoe squarely on the pad of the finger.
    Finger should create a 90-degree angle at the second joint.
    The trigger finger should not touch the stock.
    When executing the press, the trigger finger should move like a hinge straight to the rear.

    Precision-Rifle-Marksmanship-2

    This is an excerpt from Frank Galli's new book, Precision Rifle Marksmanship available now at GunDigestStore.com
    Trigger control is defined as the manipulation of the trigger without disturbing the rifle or the lay of the sights on the target. Most errors when shooting can be attributed to improper manipulation of the trigger. In fact, we are such creatures of habit, we can improperly actuate the trigger over and over yet still manage to group well. This is the most influential point, because we are turning on the machine. Pressing the trigger to the rear starts the process. In most people’s minds it is also the end, which causes them to inadvertently affect the shot placement. We literally beat the bullet out of the bore by moving the rifle and altering the sights off the target. In some cases, the shooters are so relieved at having fired the shot that they immediately disengage from the rifle. This is a bad idea.

    Firing Hand Mechanics
    The purpose of the firing hand is to manipulate the trigger and hold the rifle into the shoulder pocket. We aren’t gripping it like a handgun, rather holding it straight back to the rear. This requires very little pressure, so we don’t want to have a death grip on it. The shooter should establish a firing position on the stock that starts from the trigger back and not from the stock forward. This is more a mental process than a literal one, as we don’t want people putting their fingers on a live-weapon trigger first. The initial practice should have the shooter visualize the trigger finger before the grip. You can do this during dry practice, which is highly recommended.

    Trigger Finger Placement
    We want to place the trigger shoe squarely on the pad of the finger, creating a 90-degree angle with the finger and second joint. This will vary slightly from shooter to shooter based on their hands, and type of stock, but the goal should be to get the fingernail to point to 9 o’clock for a right-handed shooter, 3 o’clock for a left-handed shooter. This right-angle position should be there before the trigger is pressed and remain there afterward. Shooters who find their trigger fingers curling or even flying off the shoe, need to work on their trigger control and follow-through.

    Look at the trigger finger when placed on the shoe. Is your finger starting and stopping at 3 o’clock (or 9 o’clock for a right-handed shooter) when manipulating the trigger?

    Look at the trigger finger when placed on the shoe. Is your finger starting and stopping at 3 o’clock (or 9 o’clock for a right-handed shooter) when manipulating the trigger?

    When addressing the stock, regardless of the type, we want to make sure the movement of the trigger finger is not touching the stock. In the old days, they called this “dragging wood” for the obvious reasons. If the trigger finger is resting against the stock, you will influence the rifle, which is not good. As our skin moves, it compresses the muscles and pushes our flesh out under the skin creating a lateral movement on the stock.

    The trigger finger should be moving like a hinge, straight to the rear using our body mechanics to our advantage. If the fingernail starts at 9 o’clock and ends at 9 o’clock, you can rest assured you are manipulating the trigger straight back to the rear. In many cases, you’ll find the finger is moving much less than it moves if you are incorrectly pressing the trigger shoe.


    Other Fingers … Where Do They Go?
    The three fingers below the trigger finger should be pressing the stock straight back into the shoulder pocket. The pressure should not be so great to discolor them visually. We want to develop a front-to-back management of the stock, and the thumb should be there to support this front-to-back pressure. It’s not necessary to engage the thumb. Depending on the stock type, many will lay the thumb on the strong side or use it as a reference point on the stock, putting it in an out of the way place. We call this floating the thumb, and it is a perfectly acceptable position as we don’t need our thumb for the task of shooting.

    Correcting Trigger Control Errors
    Correcting a shooter’s trigger control is our main priority when teaching classes. One of the most common errors in trigger control is variety. We see shooters manipulating the trigger in a different way every single press. No consistency is what we observe.

    Do not underestimate dry practice. It takes roughly 3,000 repetitions to create a new positive neural pathway and about 9,000 repetitions to fix a bad habit. The worst part about fixing bad habits is those 9,000 new repetitions have to all be exact. When dry firing, you can watch your finger.

    It’s OK to dry fire your centerfire rifle. There should be no damage to the system. If you feel uncomfortable doing so, invest in a snap cap to absorb the impact of the firing pin. But it is generally safe to dry fire a centerfire rifle.
    Dry practice needs to be carried out as if it is a live shot. Sloppy dry practice will instill sloppy fundamentals. Invest in perfect practice. Don’t just sit there snapping the trigger, engage the rifle like your life depends on it. The more you dry practice, the better shooter you will become. For indoor dry practice, consider purchasing an Indoor Optical Training Aid (IOTA) lens device; this allows you to focus your scope indoors at 11 feet.

    Given time and opportunity before a shot, always dry fire. Set up your position so, without breaking that position, you can easily reach over and insert a live magazine or load a live round so the actual shot mimics the dry fire. We see shooters all the time dry fire perfectly and then change their hand position or cadence of fire by simply going live.
    LEST WE FORGET
    I Will Not Seal My Fate Without a Fight, If You See Me Running, I Run To The Front.
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    Member Boblo Rosscobar's Avatar
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    Great info. Thank you for sharing this!

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    Newbie smashyleroux's Avatar
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    it's ok to dry fire a center fire rifle? Does this extend to all action types?
    I've always thought this is damaging to the firing pin.
    Where does the myth come from then?

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    Thanks for sharing that

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    Quote Originally Posted by smashyleroux View Post
    it's ok to dry fire a center fire rifle? Does this extend to all action types?
    I've always thought this is damaging to the firing pin.
    Where does the myth come from then?
    Virtually all pro centre fire hand gun and long gun shooters will tell you that the best and most practice you should do is dry fire

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    Newbie smashyleroux's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by TSherback View Post
    Virtually all pro centre fire hand gun and long gun shooters will tell you that the best and most practice you should do is dry fire
    I'm gonna go with it then. Practice just got much cheaper.

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    GunNutz 1ABNDT's Avatar
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    Practice or dummy rounds never hurt your dry fire practice. And they are a great way to test function after cleaning and disassembly.
    LEST WE FORGET
    I Will Not Seal My Fate Without a Fight, If You See Me Running, I Run To The Front.
    Member of NFA CCFR CSSA NRA DTOM CATI LEFTY MAFIA

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    Super GunNutz KePet's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by smashyleroux View Post
    it's ok to dry fire a center fire rifle? Does this extend to all action types?
    I've always thought this is damaging to the firing pin.
    Where does the myth come from then?
    Not a myth, but a holdover from the days of large bore rim fires. Just like 100 years ago, dry firing a rim fire can damage/break a firing pin, or damage the breech. But it's just been passed down from generation to generation that dry firing is bad.
    My wife calls me a pessimist. I claim I'm a realist. But I'm probably just an a$$hole with an attitude problem.

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