I would have to look to determine, but I have no idea how much finger I am using, and where my middle knuckle is. No idea whether my finger is dragging in the trigger guard. What I do know is how I am setting my wrist angle, up and down and side to side, and the tension in my wrist. That allows me to move the straight trigger back, regardless of whether my finger is rubbing in the trigger guard or how much finger I have on the trigger. Here is a short video showing it, shooting support hand. (BTW, the screenshot of the video, is demonstrating the “wrong way.”
Likes pretty much everything in every caliber.
Thanks for being a subscriber. I am just not as active on youtube anymore. I lost a lot of the desire and I find that I am extremely busy with work. When I do get the 45MOS set up complete I will shoot some video when I do my normal back to back comparisons, and maybe give some thoughts. Thanks again for the interest!
The small nuances of shooting technique make for huge differences. When you look at the vast number of "instructors" out there from LE, Military, and the private sector, there is a very small percentage of those who are experts at diagnostics and intimately understanding what each shooters issue truly is.
Negative results on target can be manifested by a number of factors, some small and many in conjunction. There are still fewer instructors that can take the correct diagnosis and have the ability to conduct remediation in the most effective and correct step process to most effectively fix the shooter.
There are tons of instructors who can run a line and teach base methodology, but the true fixers are harder to find. Also, much of those who can truly teach and remediate at these high levels get paid to do it.
Mention your preferred area and some may be able to give suggestions.
The wrist moves in 3 directions so I was just trying to get an understanding the type of wrist movement you are referring to when you say "setting your wrist side to side"?
According to your video you are more referring to the specific angle of supination or pronation of the wrist/forearm - or what shooters generally call cant. In the video, it seems you are actually canting the gun very slightly reverse of the usual "gangsta style" method some people use with one handed shooting. Do you do this with 2 hand shooting too?
I originally thought you were talking about setting the amount of flexion (bowing) or extension (cupping) of the wrist. If that were the case I was trying to understand how you were accomplishing that either rotating hand around gun grip or just keeping your grip the same while independently changing wrist angle somehow.
Obviously vertical setting of the wrist on a Glock requires more ulnar deviation (vs radial deviation) due to the increased grip angle of the Glock.
Here is a quick take on how I will set my wrists with my two-handed grip. My one-handed grip and stance vary.