I like to dry practice and am working very diligently to get as little movement of the muzzle as possible when dry firing. I have noticed that for some reason I get a lot mess movement when I use my stock glock 19 when compared to my glock 17. I am trying to figure out why, especially since my 17 has had some trigger work done to remove some of the slack and get a more crisp break. Would it have something to do with the fact that he grip on the 19 is shorter therefore applying more pressure higher on the tang??? I, not the greatest shooter but have had some professional training ie multiple 4 day classes, dg' at frontsight, taken classes else where. any thoughts or grip tips would be appreciated
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Glock dry practice help
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Try putting the stock trigger components back in or the trigger from your g19 if the parts modified are easily switchable.Comment
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One of the factors for me in keeping still is how much overtravel there is. I can pull the trigger the same across multiple glocks and some will be fairly still and others a little more jumpy, and I think it is more the overtravel than trigger weight or anything else.
I've never tried to modify for it, but agree tih the poster above, OEM glock parts are fairly cheap, I would buy a couple parts sets and swap things around to find one that works better for you if you really need it to change.
Also agree to grip harder with support hand (or relax your shooting hand a bit).If it was a snake, it would have bit me.
Use the goog to search calgunsComment
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^^ This.Originally posted by HopetonBrownYou talk about "slack", but you should either be taking up slack and prepping the trigger for the first shot, or shooting from the reset on follow up shots, so I don't see why slack is a problem. Grip harder with your support hand.
Here's a good routine:
http://pistol-training.com/archives/5185sigpicComment
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