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Hunting
Long Range Hunting & Shooting
Spotting your shot
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<blockquote data-quote="J E Custom" data-source="post: 1549669" data-attributes="member: 2736"><p>That is exactly right !!</p><p>It should surprise you but with good trigger control. If it does surprise you, it is easy to call your shot. If it doesn't surprise you, you are anticipating the the trigger and nothing good comes from it. Ideally, </p><p>the trigger control is good enough that you continue adding pressure</p><p>to the trigger until it supersizes you without altering site picture or thinking about when the trigger will break. To little trigger weight will produce the same thing that happened to me. To much trigger pull and you will anticipate the trigger pull. so each person has to decide what is right for him. I trained with 4 to 6 pounds triggers so 2 pounds seems light. but for hunting it is perfect for me. Obviously, 7 oz was to light for me while hunting.</p><p></p><p>Trigger control is one of the hardest things to master and takes practice. Simply making the trigger pull lighter treats the symptoms</p><p>not the problem.</p><p></p><p>J E CUSTOM</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="J E Custom, post: 1549669, member: 2736"] That is exactly right !! It should surprise you but with good trigger control. If it does surprise you, it is easy to call your shot. If it doesn't surprise you, you are anticipating the the trigger and nothing good comes from it. Ideally, the trigger control is good enough that you continue adding pressure to the trigger until it supersizes you without altering site picture or thinking about when the trigger will break. To little trigger weight will produce the same thing that happened to me. To much trigger pull and you will anticipate the trigger pull. so each person has to decide what is right for him. I trained with 4 to 6 pounds triggers so 2 pounds seems light. but for hunting it is perfect for me. Obviously, 7 oz was to light for me while hunting. Trigger control is one of the hardest things to master and takes practice. Simply making the trigger pull lighter treats the symptoms not the problem. J E CUSTOM [/QUOTE]
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