Paul Costa emphasizes a technique for pistol grips that prioritizes leverage and minimal muscular strength to ensure consistency and reduce fatigue during extended shooting. By locking the fingers into the palm and biting into the rear of the grip with the palm, a stable and durable hold is achieved. This method aims to allow for faster trigger manipulation and predictable firearm behavior.
This video focuses on optimizing grip pressure for faster shooting by establishing the minimum necessary pressure to control the firearm. Instructor Miles demonstrates a live-fire exercise to find this sweet spot, emphasizing that excessive grip tension can hinder trigger finger speed. The technique involves finding the point where the gun doesn't move in your hand, then replicating that precise pressure during dry fire to improve trigger manipulation speed and efficiency.
This guide details how to stop flinching when shooting a pistol, as instructed by Rossen Hristov of Tactical Performance Center. It covers defining flinching, improving trigger finger dexterity through dry-fire exercises with hand grippers and an empty casing, and live-fire drills using the TPC Flinch Grinch target. The expert instruction emphasizes isolating trigger finger movement and maintaining consistent grip pressure for improved accuracy.
You've reached the end! 3 videos loaded.
Gun Laws by State
Read firearms regulations for all 50 states + D.C.
Find Gun Dealers
Search licensed FFL dealers near you.