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| If he's anticipating recoil (or flinching, jerking, whatever) he'll still be doing it post trigger-job. But yeah, that is an excessively heavy trigger.
As for a remedy start with a ton of dry fire (make sure it's unloaded!). Keep practicing your trigger pull until the sight alignment doesn't move much when the trigger breaks. Should also get a 22 pistol. The new ruger mkIV would be a fantastic place to start. Use the 22 to develop your fundamentals before you worry about the big(ger) bore handguns. Things to watch for are a consistent grip, smooth and slow trigger squeeze, and a focus on getting the sights aligned (watch the front site, not the target).
A revolver is also handy fixing problems like in this. You can load the cylinder leaving a chamber or two blank and see if you flinch when the empty is under the hammer. Practice until the flinch is gone. | |
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