I just started shooting a few weeks ago so I don't know a lot but I used to study archery from a nationally ranked archer who is also a shooter who is now giving me rifle instruction.
For those of you who train to the "surprise break" I'd like to know what you think about the way I'm dry firing. I think of the surprise break as the moment you go off an infinitely sharp cliff, such that no matter how close you get before the break you can always get closer without breaking the shot and to my mind this preserves the surprise of the break while continuously making the window of time in which the surprise break occurs smaller and smaller such that the subconscious can "time into the wobble". To my understanding the "surprise" is necessary to train to or you will "command the shot" with your conscious mind and hence possibly perform lower than might have been.
Now, my question is what is wrong with thinking of the point of dry firing as being in actuality the attempt to put as much pull force on the trigger WITHOUT breaking the shot. Because it seems to me this both narrows the window of the surprise break to, lets say, infinitely narrow in time but without losing the surprise. So I'm focusing on how close I can get to the edge of an infinitely sharp cliff without going over.
What do you think?
Also, I don't understand the "steady pressure on the trigger" concept because my trigger takes I think 2.5lbs to break. Steady pressure, meaning one level of pull-force, will move the trigger to a point and no more. I assume what is meant is actually "steadily increasing pressure" on the trigger, which I think might have the same end result of what I'm doing but it seems to me that my way is more efficient, that if you focus on trying to NOT break the shot but while increasing the force its more direct and more clear of a task than trying to create "steadily increasing pressure" against a mechanical device that is opposing your force in a, I would say, nonlinear way. Too confusing. Why not just pull as hard as you can without breaking the shot, getting slower and finer as you get to the edge of the cliff.
For those of you who train to the "surprise break" I'd like to know what you think about the way I'm dry firing. I think of the surprise break as the moment you go off an infinitely sharp cliff, such that no matter how close you get before the break you can always get closer without breaking the shot and to my mind this preserves the surprise of the break while continuously making the window of time in which the surprise break occurs smaller and smaller such that the subconscious can "time into the wobble". To my understanding the "surprise" is necessary to train to or you will "command the shot" with your conscious mind and hence possibly perform lower than might have been.
Now, my question is what is wrong with thinking of the point of dry firing as being in actuality the attempt to put as much pull force on the trigger WITHOUT breaking the shot. Because it seems to me this both narrows the window of the surprise break to, lets say, infinitely narrow in time but without losing the surprise. So I'm focusing on how close I can get to the edge of an infinitely sharp cliff without going over.
What do you think?
Also, I don't understand the "steady pressure on the trigger" concept because my trigger takes I think 2.5lbs to break. Steady pressure, meaning one level of pull-force, will move the trigger to a point and no more. I assume what is meant is actually "steadily increasing pressure" on the trigger, which I think might have the same end result of what I'm doing but it seems to me that my way is more efficient, that if you focus on trying to NOT break the shot but while increasing the force its more direct and more clear of a task than trying to create "steadily increasing pressure" against a mechanical device that is opposing your force in a, I would say, nonlinear way. Too confusing. Why not just pull as hard as you can without breaking the shot, getting slower and finer as you get to the edge of the cliff.