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The first effort to master a DA revolver is to fit it to your hand. Select grips that fit you while firing, not just those that look pretty or feel "good" when not shooting. Next put in a smooth trigger. My preference is the smooth Ranger one that S&W used on many service guns in the 80's and 90's. An action job is next. After that begins the dry fire, lots of it. I do prefer to use snap caps when I'm doing a bunch of it.
My personal preference is toward the 158gr (appx) weight bullets, in both .38Spl and .357 mag loads.
A good way to get better faster with a centerfire revolver is to spend time shooting a S&W 17 or 18. Put the same style stocks and that smooth Ranger trigger on it.
My personal preference is toward the 158gr (appx) weight bullets, in both .38Spl and .357 mag loads.
A good way to get better faster with a centerfire revolver is to spend time shooting a S&W 17 or 18. Put the same style stocks and that smooth Ranger trigger on it.