JHaddock07
Amateur
Once again @Jordan Haddock I appreciate your help. An average 97 on timed B8 at 25 is pretty damn good IMO.
I am shooting factory rounds. Now, they are target rounds, nothing special, 115 gr round nose. I do reload and I do shoot reloads but not when I'm sighting in or trying to figure out what I'm doing wrong.
Not a problem. And thank you, but to be fair, I average 200+ rounds a week, plus whatever I shoot with clients. That being said, I would be a liar if I tried to say that I don't still suffer from "flinching" on occasion.
Reloads are a great option, I simply failed to realize that the projectiles I was using are a sister company of Freedom Munitions. Had I known that, I would have found a different manufacturing source for the projectiles. Not to deviate too much further from the topic, but I would recommend looking into getting your training ammo as close to your carry ammo as possible regarding grain weight and velocities. You'll also find that if you're running 124-147 gr. rounds with the compensator, the recoil characteristics drastically improve (especially with 147 gr.) as you up the weight.
Are you prepping the trigger before your shot? What I mean is, are you bring the slack out of the trigger until you're right up against the "wall" or focusing on the trigger reset with multiple shot strings of fire? Look around YouTube for cadence drills, that will help you quite a bit (at least it did for me).
Your grouping isn't bad overall. You have to remember that if you're able to stack rounds in the 9 ring under synthetic stress at 15 yards, you're doing a great job in the grand scheme of things and should be able to only improve as you work through fine tuning your shot processes. Classes, classes, classes. If you get the opportunity take professionally instructed classes, especially from the P&S vetted instructors you'll be amazed at what you may learn even if it's a relatively "basic" pistol course.
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