by Baldrick314 » 05 Dec 2013, 7:01 am
chacho wrote:Hi,
I've read that doing dry fire practice can be a good method for getting rid of flinch, but I'm not sure I'm getting any benefit out of it.
I can smoothly fire every time when when chamber is empty, but as soon as I know there is a live round in it I sometimes hesitate again.
Has anyone found they got a benefit from doing dry fire practice?
Just wanted to see what others experience before I go bashing away on the bolt a hundred times for no reason.
Thanks.
I don't know how applicable this is to you but when I first got into pistol shooting my brother in law would take me to the range and load his revolver and give it to me, occasionally there would be one chamber with nothing in it and that would really highlight if you were flinching or not. Essentially the same as the method mentioned above with inserting a blank into a rifle. I think they key is for the shooter not to be aware when it's going to happen
.177, .22lr, .22-250R, 2x .308W, .30-30W, 7.62x54r, 8x56r, 9x19, .357 Mag, 12GA