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The little Things.


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Posted
It's custom made for SHTF, if the shooter practices it enough. Learn a technique, practice it a million times and it becomes instinct. Instinct is what will happen when there's no time to think. I've been shooting IDPA for two years, and have to concentrate to NOT shoot from reset.

Agreed and exactly what I was thinking as I read the initial post as well. One of the first things I absorbed while starting USPSA was to ride the trigger reset rather than fully release the trigger between shots. My split times decreased dramatically and my accuracy improved as well. Now I find it almost impossible not to ride the trigger on follow-through and hate guns that don't have a solid, distinctive, tactile trigger reset.

For those of you shooting M&P automatics, a somewhat lesser known fact is that you can get Glock-like trigger reset (firm, definitive snap) by swapping your trigger for the Massachusetts compliant 10# trigger.

I have the trigger assembly and am waiting on a S&W Performance Center sear before I tear into my M&P 40 and improve it.

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Posted

Great Tip. I will give it a try the next time I am at the range.

I almost feel dumb for not knowing about this. However it does affirm my many hours spent here are not wasted. :)

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