Re: Todd Hodnett: Grip and Finger Hold for Long Range
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Lowlight</div><div class="ubbcode-body">This is truly comical, the position on the video is completely ineffective because it is being explained wrong. That is a screen shot from the Magpul Video...
Because a video came out last month it's this new voodoo, meanwhile, the credit goes to Rifles Only for this grip, except the right way, not half way.
The Online Training posted "trigger school" in August of 2009... here is the screen shot from that...
This method was being used at RO for years... and guess who took a class there ?
You have to support the rifle with the firing hand, in the Magpul video, the rifle is not being supported properly and gets away from the shooter on more than one occasion. Clearly there is an issue with the trigger control and it is not addressed. Not rocket, but in fact easy to see... Done correctly the rifle is supported and floating the thumb is only an option, not a rule. The goal of that position is to use the mechanics of the 90 degree trigger finger, and to support the rifle during recoil. That was not achieved in the video as demonstrated on more than one shot... and when a question of "cant" was raised on a missed shot it was actually do to poor trigger control.
If you are gonna give credit to something it should be to the person who perfected the grip, not someone's idea of a weak imitation.
The way to eliminate the sympathetic squeeze is to rotate the hand to achieve the 90 and then to use a front to back pressure against the grip like the firing hand of a handgun. Trigger school, is only one part and is over 10 minutes long, it doesn't even address Follow Through which is another 10 minutes worth... 20 minutes on Trigger Control alone... not including other instances of discussion on it.
Getting wide spread attention doesn't automatically make it new. </div></div>
The grip in this first pic is the style i was referring to. It was shown to me by a instructor that I'm sure has spent some time at RO. He wasn't claiming it as his own, just passing it along as instruction.