Friday, December 28, 2018

Get Training

Smith & Wesson M&P models 2.0 now have a more pronounced trigger reset.  For any shooter worth his salt, this is not only an upgrade, but a huge upgrade. 

Seen online in response:
"I've never seen the point in shooting the reset. People obsess over it but it can and does slow you down. Most of the worlds best shooters 'slap' the trigger when shooting quickly. Reset has become such an obsession that I had some shooters on my range complaining about the lack of reset on a double action revolver. Reset is fine if you're shooting slow for accuracy but when you're in a hurry, you've got a lot more to think about than that click in your trigger."

The sad thing is that this uneducated creature actually listed his employment as a Range Safety Officer.

That's why you need to get professional training. 


2 comments:

  1. Ok, so why is he wrong? Enlighten us.

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    Replies
    1. The distance point of the reset is (or at least should be) at pretty much the same point every time. As you train more with the same gun, you learn where that reset is. This allows you to appear to "slap" the trigger, but your finger is not really travelling that much more. For example - watch a slowed down Larry Vickers or Jerry Miculek video - when their finger comes off the trigger, it is not by much. Logic clearly dictates that a shorter distance can be more quickly traversed. In layman's terms - less wasted movement.

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