Fenixgoon
Lifer
- Jun 30, 2003
- 32,890
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The best way to diagnose flinching is to have a buddy load several snap caps at random points in a magazine. Pay attention to what you're doing each time you pull the trigger. if the gun moves when you hit one of the snap caps, you're flinching.
Dry firing is great for smoothing out an action, building muscle memory, and mastering a trigger. It's an essential part of training IMO.
i had a buddy do that to me this past weekend.
i pulled up every time i pulled the trigger to account for the recoil. still need to work that kink out, but it's nice to know that that's one of the things that is affect my accuracy.