View Single Post
Old June 28, 2013, 09:19 AM   #7
btmj
Senior Member
 
Join Date: November 1, 2011
Location: Near St. Louis, Missouri
Posts: 864
You are getting a lot of great advice here.

Pay close attention to what Frank has written. But I will draw emphasis to this point:

Quote:
I'll warn you that I'm a big proponent of good professional training. Among other things, there is really no good substitute for a qualified instructor watching what you are doing and coaching you based on what he sees.
There are some things that are very hard to diagnose over the internet. Bad shooting form is one of those.

As I said, I don't develop a flinch until after about 100 rounds. However if I am shooting something harsh, like a 9mm pocket gun or a featherweight 38 snub, or my 44 mag, the flinch can start earlier. In the case of the 44 mag it can happen after the 3rd cylinder full. Once I detect it, I can manage it... through concentration, and a few minutes of dry fireing.
btmj is offline  
 
Page generated in 0.02780 seconds with 8 queries