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- Apr 4, 2006
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I could not agree more! The smaller the target circle, the less your drift will be and the smaller your groups will be. "Aim Small - Miss Small" so they saying goes. I try and get that point across to new shooters who thinkl they will embarrase themselves less by shooting at a giant bullseye. When I give them a B-3 NRA target for use at 50 feet and put a 3/4" red sticker inside the 2.5" black circle they bitch and moan - until I make them try it. Then they surprise themselves.Along with this advice control your wobble with the trigger. Every one has a sight wobble, slight or major. Put yours in as small a circle as possible. While focusing on trigger pressure only add pressure to it when you are in the last quarter of the circle approaching the target, never when you are moving away from it.
The concentration of these two things should keep your mind off of "This is going to be load, unexpected and painful".
Just showing you the 3/4" orange circles within the 2.5" B-3 targets. Certainly not my best shooting last week.