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Hunting
Long Range Hunting & Shooting
Hand position while shooting
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<blockquote data-quote="TracySes23" data-source="post: 950674" data-attributes="member: 52763"><p>A while back I was watching a YouTube video of a bench rest shooter using a technique I'd never seen before. But I keep forgetting to try it.</p><p>He'd put his forefinger on the trigger like everyone else, but he did something interesting with his thumb.</p><p>Using his thumb on the same hand as his trigger finger, he placed it behind the back of the trigger guard. He then squeezed his thumb and forefinger together instead of just squeezing the trigger as most normally do. I watched it about 20 times & concluded, the pressure should the same from opposing sides of the trigger & shouldn't cause any unwanted movement.</p><p>I've yet to try this myself, but I have high hopes it will make my trigger pull or squeeze more consistent.</p><p>If anyone has tried this or tries it before I do, I'd like to hear their opinion of how it works for them.</p><p></p><p>Spencer</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TracySes23, post: 950674, member: 52763"] A while back I was watching a YouTube video of a bench rest shooter using a technique I'd never seen before. But I keep forgetting to try it. He'd put his forefinger on the trigger like everyone else, but he did something interesting with his thumb. Using his thumb on the same hand as his trigger finger, he placed it behind the back of the trigger guard. He then squeezed his thumb and forefinger together instead of just squeezing the trigger as most normally do. I watched it about 20 times & concluded, the pressure should the same from opposing sides of the trigger & shouldn't cause any unwanted movement. I've yet to try this myself, but I have high hopes it will make my trigger pull or squeeze more consistent. If anyone has tried this or tries it before I do, I'd like to hear their opinion of how it works for them. Spencer [/QUOTE]
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