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Thread: Dealing with a flinch

  1. #31
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    I missed a slow walking yearling last week at 240yds,could only see sholder neck,grrr.Bugger wouldnt stop,so i tryed.Hmmm missed,how could i?so had one more day to go.Thort il checked my 308 at a hundy on a cardboard box i had in the truck,spot on nearly with one shot.Mustv been me,be more carefully ah.Dont know about flinching,just to big a hurry befor yearling disappears.Name:  20220305_112220.jpg
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  2. #32
    Member Mintie's Avatar
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    I've noticed a flinch starting to build, mine is only when shooting centrefire and I think the fact I'm out shooting PCP rifles every day is to blame. My mind is perfectly used to zero recoil and next to no noise when I pull the trigger but it knows to be wary of the big bad centrefires. I think I need to get my .223 out for weekly shoots, it's cheap to shoot and should build up a better sub conscious response to getting behind my bigger centrefires.
    timattalon likes this.

  3. #33
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    I’ve had this problem and a small caliber with a suppressor is good. 243 or 223. For myself the main time to flinch is standing. I deal with it by basically not fu$king around for too long as I think the longer you stand there aiming the quicker you head fu$ks it up. Let’s assume you see a deer inside 100 yards and a standing shot is the only option. Bring the rifle up, when it’s on the should breath out and squeeze off. Of course lying down and all the time in the world, dry fire once or twice them bombs away!
    Nathan F and JessicaChen like this.

  4. #34
    Member Nathan F's Avatar
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    The other thing I’ve done is lighten the trigger right off in both main hunting rifles. Off to the range again tomorrow
    Micky Duck likes this.

  5. #35
    Member Micky Duck's Avatar
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    trigger pull is a funny thing...2-3-4lb works great..too light and you will stuff it up on quick shots,trigger finger will rest on trigger as going onto target and fire too soon...lost pig on dairy pasture from that...I also found back in my bad flinch days..too light made it worse as I lost control of when it would fire...3lb is pretty good FOR ME.

    funny wee flinch story to show how bad it can get.
    3 of us on range,all young fellas all wiht 270s .mate had trouble zeroing his ruger so I had a go..trigger was terribly heavy and I had fired a few rounds..I LITERALY could not make it go bang... I too kround out and could pull trigger no worries, pt a round in and just could not do it.. my mind knew the boot was coming and remembered the heavy triggerr thing from back when my rifle was bad for it.... it was that balls up that made me go and buy a thick bisly recoil pad for the old rifle..no limbsavers back then..... I spent next 15 years happily shooting rifle as it was ,with lightish reloads,then fitted suppressor and worked back into hottish loads.
    keep at it bud....you WILL beat this.
    Nathan F likes this.

  6. #36
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    @Nathan F Is that why that pack looked so light on the walk out from the bite the other day? Very photo genic by the way!
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  7. #37
    Member Nathan F's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Fireflite View Post
    @Nathan F Is that why that pack looked so light on the walk out from the bite the other day? Very photo genic by the way!
    @Fireflite na was poaching up ur end. Did you not notice the couple of scrubby heads hanging off the back

  8. #38
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    @nathan they looked liked monsters! Your partner looked great in black!

    Need to catch up in there some time!
    Nathan F likes this.

  9. #39
    Member Nathan F's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Fireflite View Post
    @nathan they looked liked monsters! Your partner looked great in black!

    Need to catch up in there some time!
    Pm me ur number

  10. #40
    Member Nathan F's Avatar
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    Well that went better than expected today. Was doing load testing for the .223. Have found my loads I think @Tahr
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    The targex went unreal. The smk’s we’re going good too
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  11. #41
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    Quote Originally Posted by Nathan F View Post
    Well that went better than expected today. Was doing load testing for the .223. Have found my loads I think @Tahr
    Attachment 193434
    The targex went unreal. The smk’s we’re going good too
    Attachment 193435
    Wow. Thats excellent. Look out bush dwelling elusive quadrupeds
    Nathan F likes this.
    Out beyond ideas of wrongdoing, and right-doing, there is a field. I will meet you there.
    - Rumi

  12. #42
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    Quote Originally Posted by outdoorlad View Post
    Yes it helps, another thing to do at the range is get someone to load or not load a round for you so you don’t know if it’s loaded or not, generally shows up flinching well and helps overcome it, also do some practice with a low calibre rifle (222) that doesn’t recoil to get back on the basic’s.
    Just use a trebly as your go to gat.Works for me
    Nathan F likes this.

  13. #43
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    I have not read this thread but when i first got my T3 7mil rem mag i lightened off the trigger pull to almost as light as it would go ,dunno what it actually is but bloody light and for awhile thought trigger was too light for me but then i spent 25yrs using a Browning BLR which has a truly horrible trigger, it must be around 4 lbs with a fair amount of creep thrown in for good luck!! but gee i still love that gun .
    Anyway i spent alot of time dry firing my rem mag ,concentrating on my breathing and squeezing off the "shot" without any discernible movement of the retical on whatever i was aiming at.
    Now i am used to the trigger its one thing i really like about my Tikka and dry firing practice has improved my shooting a lot .
    Nathan F likes this.

  14. #44
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    I started shooting with a 3006 and 8x57 with no recoil pads at the age of 15, that's one way to create a hell of a flinch... when I could I got a howa 7m08, still flinched realy bad put up with it for ages, tried heaps of .22 shooting and no flinch there but as soon as I picked up a full sized rifle the flinch would come back. I ended up buying a 7mm rem mag t3x, suppressed and limbsaver pad on it. Not sure how i thought it would help with my flinch.. I them bought a t1x in .17hmr, I have rifles set up the same even with the trigger weight. After lots of shooting with the .17 I jumped behind the rem mag which feels exactly the same and started shooting. No flinch. Took a while but feels good, nice and easy to practice shooting with a cheap rim fire and can easily transfer those techniques to a much lager Calibre as the stocks, foregrips, pistol grips , trigger weight and scope height is the same. Was a very expensive way of doing it but buy once cry once right????
    Fisherman, Micky Duck and Bradp like this.

  15. #45
    Member Rock river arms hunter's Avatar
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    Lots and lots of dry fire goes along way.

    Dry firing at a tiny dot of blue tack on the wall can do wonders.

    And as you're squeezing the trigger remember to keep the pull constant and the same the whole way through the squeezing process.

    Don't grab at the trigger when it's on target as it'll invariably stuff it up.

    Trigger control, sight picture, grip and stance are the four basic fundamentals we ram home for competitive shooting which also apply aptly for hunting.
    Nathan F, Micky Duck and Yesmate like this.

 

 

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