Shooting to the left
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Shooting to the left
When shooting my Glock 26 or my Glock 27 I always shoot to the left of what I am aiming at and I can't figure out why. Now if I shoot my Gock 31, 9 times out of 10 I can shoot what I am aiming at. I can't figure why I can do the same with my sub Glocks.
It seems the more I concentrate, the worse I do. If I just point and shot, I am usually on center. The longer I aim and adjust, the shot will be to the left.
I think my trigger finger is pulling the gun to the left, thus why the shots are going to the left, but I have not figured out why I do it just on the sub guns. My only reasoning is the fact that I am dealing with a short grip.
Any thoughts/feed back would be appreciated.
It seems the more I concentrate, the worse I do. If I just point and shot, I am usually on center. The longer I aim and adjust, the shot will be to the left.
I think my trigger finger is pulling the gun to the left, thus why the shots are going to the left, but I have not figured out why I do it just on the sub guns. My only reasoning is the fact that I am dealing with a short grip.
Any thoughts/feed back would be appreciated.
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- Joined: Fri Dec 24, 2004 1:32 am
- Location: Houston, TX.
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- Junior Member
- Posts in topic: 2
- Posts: 10
- Joined: Fri Dec 24, 2004 1:32 am
- Location: Houston, TX.
If you are right handed, and your shot groups are to the left, that usually indicates you have too much trigger finger being used. If you look at your grip while holding your weapon, see if the inside of the trigger finger is touching the side of the weapon. If it is touching, as you compress the trigger, your finger is "pushing" the weapon to the left. It doesn't take much to make your point of impact off. Try it & let me know if this helps. You really need to position your trigger finger with the pad of your finger on the trigger, allowing a gap between the rest of your trigger finger & the side of the weapon.
JVE
JVE
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Shooting to the left
Blazen,
One of the two main causes, pushing the trigger finger, has already been discussed. If you shoot right handed, the other cause is squeezing the grip tighter as you execute the shot. This is a fairly common problem for many shooting compact pistols.
I shot pistol competitively many years ago while in the Marine Corps. Our pistol team coach, an old USMC warrant officer, would look at our targets after shooting a string of fire and ask if we'd like him to squeeze a certain part of our anatomy like we were squeezing the grip. We all got the point and learned how to properly grasp our weapon while executing a shot.
Check out "error analysis" at http://www.bullseyepistol.com.
Mike Cornell
One of the two main causes, pushing the trigger finger, has already been discussed. If you shoot right handed, the other cause is squeezing the grip tighter as you execute the shot. This is a fairly common problem for many shooting compact pistols.
I shot pistol competitively many years ago while in the Marine Corps. Our pistol team coach, an old USMC warrant officer, would look at our targets after shooting a string of fire and ask if we'd like him to squeeze a certain part of our anatomy like we were squeezing the grip. We all got the point and learned how to properly grasp our weapon while executing a shot.
Check out "error analysis" at http://www.bullseyepistol.com.
Mike Cornell
To be turned from one's course by men's opinions, by blame, and by misrepresentation shows a man unfit to hold an office.
Quintus Maximus 250 B.C.
Quintus Maximus 250 B.C.