What a pant load of half a$$ bs. Maybe it is not him, but chances are with a relatively novice shooter, it probably is the trigger actuator versus the handgun. There is no shame in this fact as we all had to start from somewhere. As for your second pretty much baseless & worthless statement sunray, I guess my Hammerli Model 150 target pistol designed from the ground up for 50 meter competition needs a trip to the gunsmith for a trigger job!Isn't necessarily you. How well do the pistols fit your hand? Too big will do that. So will a poor trigger. And every commercial firearm, except a Python, needs a trigger job. If you can't reach the trigger correctly, you'll never be able to shoot 'em well. Plus revolvers and pistols are shot differently. Has to do with how you grip 'em.
Merc's chart should be a sticky if it isn't there already.
I dont think your being macho. You being respectful and polite.
The wonderful thing about the gun community.
Everyone is a professional with their own opinions...... and everyone else opinion are wrong
Inevitably, arguments will ensue.
I just like to argue with statements like "And every commercial firearm, except a Python, needs a trigger job."
Throwing money at a gun does not make one a better shooter.
Actually.... I just like to argue in general![]()
Very nice.. good link thanks..
Mind this is a correction target chart for right-handers.
There's another one for left-handers.
A piece of advice: rather than carrying this chart and comparing your shots on
target with the chart for a diagnosis. make tens, dozens, nay, hundreds of photocopies
and shoot at the chart. Never mind that the bullseye or the 10 or X rings are
not the same size as your regular targets. You want to see where each lands
while the memory of what you did is still fresh in your mind.
Just my $0.05 (They cancelled pennies.)
Both those charts are useless. It's simple, don't disturb the sights when you pull the trigger. I can shoot the gun upside down with my pinky finger sucked up tight on the trigger and hit the bull every time. It has nothing to do with how much finger you have or anything. Don't disturb the sights when you pull the trigger. Once you learn how to do that you can worry about the finesse stuff.



























