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#26 |
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Join Date: March 11, 2006
Location: Upper US
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Some years back I saw an article that told us the "right" way to shoot an SA was with the thumb of the shooting hand resting on the recoil shield.
Some years back I also saw a lot of signs saying "vote for Hillary". I put both of these in the same category. ![]()
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#27 | ||
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Join Date: October 11, 2014
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I wear an XL glove and the Navy grip works fine for me using the technique described in the video. Quote:
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#28 |
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Join Date: July 22, 2010
Location: Madison, Wisconsin
Posts: 1,198
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Jack correctly points out that it depends on the grips.
I shoot one handed and the Ruger Bisley grip is my great preference. I don't need to adjust my grip after recoil as the backstrap is much more vertical. My stance is the "natural stance". To get this, you close your eyes and aim at the target. Open your eyes. Rather than move your hand to adjust left/right, move your FEET. When you naturally point to the target, when the gun lifts your arm and rocks you back, when your arm comes back down you should be right back on target... only adjusting up/down. After a while, you know the stance instinctively, like shooting a shotgun. Of course you aim (unlike a shotgun), but you're already close. Holding the gun with two hands messes this up for me. Perhaps it's I don't practice that way? Anyways and ironically, I much preferred to shoot hand cannons with one hand as two handed shoved me back too much as my arms could not swing high. With the "plow handle" grips, the gun rotates in my hand such that I need to fuss a bit to re-establish my grip. With a Bearcat, there is no way to get a whole hand around those little grips! It's a reminder to me, though.. just what a little gem the Bearcat is.
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I hunt, shoot bullseye, plink, reload, and tinker with firearms. I have hung out with the Cowboy Action fellas. I have no interest in carrying firearms in urban areas. |
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#29 |
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Join Date: September 8, 2007
Location: Mississippi
Posts: 16,009
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I'm a pinky curler. My left hand never touches the gun unless I'm loading or unloading. Do I have to readjust my grip? I honestly don't know. I never thought about it.
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#30 | ||
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Join Date: March 11, 2006
Location: Upper US
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Been thinking about the discussion a bit, and I got to wondering, WHY some people feel it a bad thing to adjust your grip between shots when shooting an SA revolver (recreationally). Oh look! he had to adjust his grip!! ![]() ![]() in calibers ranging from .22LR to .45-70. Many of those guns allow me to "lock" the gun in my hand, and my grip doesn't need to shift. With an SA revolver, (and I'm talking about guns with recoil, not .22s) the gun shifts in my hand when it fires. I believe it is supposed to! In between the muzzle pointing to the sky, hauling it back down to get another sight picture, and reaching up to cock the gun with the shooting hand thumb, then putting that thumb back down on the grip, how can you NOT "be guilty" of adjusting your grip?? I feel no guilt at all about it. I think it's part of the SA revolver shooting experience. If you think that's a bad thing, you're welcome to your opinion, though I wil, respectfully, disagree.
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#31 | ||||
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Join Date: October 11, 2014
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#32 |
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Join Date: July 20, 2005
Location: Indiana
Posts: 10,339
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I find that curling my pinky under the grip is the most comfortable way to shoot a SA revolver, but I also have large hands (XL gloves) and I've not shot many that aren't particularly hard recoiling. My own bigbore SA is a Ruger Blackhawk .44 Special which is fed almost exclusively my own handloaded "Skeeter Skelton" loads of 7.5 gr Unique under a 250 gr Lyman 429421 "Keith" bullet. From my revolver's 5 1/2" barrel, this load chronographs at roughly 1050 fps so it's a pretty good approximation of a full-power .45 Long Colt Black Powder load. With this gun an ammunition, I've never had a problem with the trigger guard hitting my knuckles or causing any pain. This has also not been an issue shooting full-power 210 gr factory ammunition from my younger brother's 6 1/2" .41 Magnum Blackhawk, but that's about the most powerful SA revolver I've ever shot more than a cylinder full of ammunition through (the only issue I had with my brother's .41 was the checkered factory grip was like a cheese grater rolling in my hand, both his and my Blackhawks now wear smooth grips). The only other SA revolvers I own and shoot regularly are a pair of Heritage Rough Riders in .22 LR or .22 Magnum depending on which cylinder I'm using and obviously recoil simply isn't an issue with the .22's.
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#33 |
Senior Member
Join Date: November 26, 2006
Location: Federal Way
Posts: 121
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Suggesting people start shooting SA with their pinky curled underneath seems quite reasonable as it works for many. People will always find out what doesn't work for them.
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#34 | |||||
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Join Date: March 11, 2006
Location: Upper US
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I spoke with a friend who is very knowledgeable about old west and Civil War history who is firmly convinced that the pinky under the butt method was popularized by one of the early top Cowboy Action shooters, and while I have no idea if he is right about that, or not, I know he is right about not being able to find any reference to that method in Colt manuals, Union or US Army instruction manuals, period photographs or woodcuts, and no mention of it in the writings of old west lawmen or gunfighters, or in anything I've read by Keith or Skelton. Not saying nobody did it, back then, but if people did, nobody seems to have written about it or gotten any pictures. This leads me to doubt the guns were designed with pinky under the butt in mind. Quote:
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Those "atrocious rubber grips" are what I like and prefer, they make the gun more comfortable to hold and shoot, for me, and they have the exact opposite effect on muzzle rise, they help reduce it, not increase it. Also, I'm shooting Ruger new Model Blackhawks and Super Blackhawk, not Colt SAA's or clones. most of them with 7.5" barrels, as I've let my shorter barrel Vaqueros go, recently.
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#35 |
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Join Date: October 11, 2014
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Again, if hands were smaller then, why would they need the longer grip on the horse pistols and 1860? The logic just doesn't track.
When you spend as much time as I have learning speed with a single action, when you actually shoot these guns as you would in a gunfight or when hunting dangerous game, you understand that the grip really doesn't need to move in your hand if you need to get things done in a hurry. Not flat wrong, basic mechanics. The grip places your hand lower on the gun, that is a fact. Placing the hand lower on the gun also lowers the fulcrum around which it rotates during recoil. This results in increased leverage the gun has against the shooter and that translates to greater muzzle rise. Basic geometry and physics. It is also basic geometry that if you place the hand lower on the gun, you're moving your thumb further away from the hammer. Rugers or Colts makes no difference in this context. |
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#36 | |
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#37 |
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Join Date: October 11, 2014
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This is under the basic assumption that the grips shouldn't be sliding around in your hand in the first place.
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#38 |
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Join Date: March 11, 2006
Location: Upper US
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"assumption"....
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#39 |
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Join Date: October 11, 2014
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As I said, the grip shouldn't be sliding through your hand in the first place. I "assume" people know that.
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#40 | |
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Merry Christmas!
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#41 | |
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A clinger and deplorable, MAGA, and life NRA member. When guns are outlawed, only outlaws will have guns. Single Action .45 Colt (Sometimes colloquially referred to by its alias as the .45 'Long' Colt or .45LC). Don't leave home without it. That said, the .44Spec is right up their too... but the .45 Colt is still the king. Last edited by rclark; December 26, 2022 at 12:36 AM. |
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