New shooter-shots going left

rayzorloo

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Hi everyone, I am a new shooter and need some help. I shoot a ISSC M-22 single action semi-auto. My sights are set up fine, (had an R.O. check it out) and he suggested it is my trigger pull. I have watched numerous You-Tube on trigger pull technique, some say finger placement depends on if DA or SA, etc. Just hoping someone here can help with that as well, finger placement, how to get rid of "flinch", etc. My club is at 20 yards, indoor.

Thanks
 
1) Get good advice ---> lessons if required.
2) Shoot.
2) Shoot more.
4) Shoot some more.

- Record yourself, it may help you determine what your doing wrong/right.
- Randomly place dummy rounds into the magazine, they'll show you if you're flinching.
- Front sight, front sight, front sight!
- Just out of curiosity, do you know your eye dominance?
 
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Right handed shooter?
Your hand naturally wants to point slightly left
Grip is very important. You want the palm of your left hand to redirect the gun right. Your right hand is taking the recoil. Your left hand should be doing a large part of gripping the gun

With that said
Follow points 1 thru 4 as mentioned by 4n2to. Repeat steps 2 thru 4 as much as possible

chrisco
 
Can you post a picture of your target? Saying your shots go left is a bit vague. How far left? High left? Low left?
You aren't flinching if you are just shooting pin high left. There is a likelihood you are pushing the trigger to the left when you are squeezing off the shot. What kind of stance or grip are you using? If your shooting hand (right handed?) overpowers your support hand, you may shoot left also ( usually with more powerful rds. than a .22 though)
Best advice is take a lesson. Don't mess up your fundamentals early!
 
Hi one other important point. .too much cheek pressure on the stock can push shots left or right depending if your right or left shooter.
checkout you tube..hope this helps.
 
Video taping yourself or having somebody watch you. you maybe be able to spot something you are doing that you don't notice you are doing when doing it. If they are all constantly to the left aim to the right.:) When you hold the gun do you cant it to the left or right?
 
Sounds like you're right handed as mentioned by chrisco. If that's the case likely what is happening is you are curling your trigger finger as you squeeze the trigger and as a result are turning the pistol just after the sear releases.
check out ht tp://www.adjunct.diodon349.com/attack_on_usa/pistol_and_revolver_error_analysis_and_correction.htm to help you interpret your problem

Note remove the space between the ht tp: as hot linking is not permitted on this site.
 
I am right handed but my dominant eye is my left one. As a result, I always shoot to the left.
I have to move my rear sight to the right to compensate. I try to get adjustable sights
on my handguns as it is easier than moving the entire sight in a dovetail.
 
Step one: Natural firing position...find a position where the firearm naturally points towards the target
Step two: Firm against your shoulder
Step three: control your breathing...deep breaths followed by a half breath out and hold
Step four: SQUEEZE the trigger, you should be surprised when it fires (This is usually the #1 reason for right/left issues)
Step five: PRACTICE OFTEN!
 
1. Image you firing hand is tied to a pole deep in the ground, and only your trigger finger moves straight back, slowly and steady(hence squeeze).
2. Focus on your front sight, DO NOT EVER think about when the gun is going BANG(at which moment it should scare you a little bit). This way you won't anticipate the recoil and flinch.
3. relax and tighten you wrists with an isosceles stance which is easier for beginners.
4. and if the target distance can be adjusted, start with 5 yards and slowly build up the distance.
5. practice frequently.
 
I am not sure that's the right way to fix cross-domiinant eye "issue". I am exactly like you, and slightly near-sighted as well without glasses. With the 5-months I am in, I can shoot straight at 12 meters distance fairly accurately without any adjustment to many of my guns. I started with 45ACP and went backwards to have some 9mm just to cover all the calibers. To me, it's all about proper grip, stance and trigger pull with tons of practice.

I am right handed but my dominant eye is my left one. As a result, I always shoot to the left.
I have to move my rear sight to the right to compensate. I try to get adjustable sights
on my handguns as it is easier than moving the entire sight in a dovetail.
 
I am not sure that's the right way to fix cross-domiinant eye "issue". I am exactly like you, and slightly near-sighted as well without glasses. With the 5-months I am in, I can shoot straight at 12 meters distance fairly accurately without any adjustment to many of my guns. I started with 45ACP and went backwards to have some 9mm just to cover all the calibers. To me, it's all about proper grip, stance and trigger pull with tons of practice.

An eye patch.
 
Low left is almost always anticipation of recoil.

Get some dummy rounds dummy up your mags (mix of live and dummy rounds) and have someone watch your gun. It shouldn't move a lot on the dummy rounds

front sight, front sight, front sight
 
for pistol, no eye patch needed. just shoot with both eyes open. rifle with iron sight only is the challenge. either weak hand or eye patch. I don't shoot rifle now, but years ago, I did with left eye closed and just fine too.

An eye patch.
 
Start here. Add the W's. .targetshooting.ca/docs/Pistol_Shot_Analysis.pdf
For a left eyed right handed shooter, shooting one handed, move your hind leg to bring the sights in line with the target. As opposed to moving your arm. Really sounds like you need to move the sights though.
Your finger should be on the trigger with the highest part of the pad a bit left of the trigger.
Good or better ear defenders will help with the flinch you really don't have. You're reacting more to the BANG than the felt recoil.
I think you can get an adjustable sight for an M22. Might be worth looking into. Or spending a big hunk of money on a sight pusher.
 
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