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Thread: Break my bad habit of flinching

  1. #1
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    Break my bad habit of flinching

    After only shooting .22 rifles at the range for marksmanship classes at my High School I purchased a 7mm Magnum for my deer gun from a recommendation from a friend. My first shot gave me a jolt and the scope gave me a nice cut on my eyelid. Ever since that first shot I have had a problem with flinching. I always anticipate the shot. It's embarrassing especially when shooting a smaller caliber at the range like a 9mm handgun. It is also effecting my sighting in of my new AR15. My groups are inconsistent. This handicap is frustrating. Any advice for this girly man?

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    Have someone load dummy rounds into the gun randomly.


    Shoot more 22.


    Dry fire.


    Press the trigger so you dont know when the gun is going to go off. Dont anticipate the recoil.

  3. #3
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    What belmont suggests will work...shoot the snot out of the 22's.

    Do you shoot any shotguns?? Try shooting some skeet / clays in between your centerfire sessions. The higher volume shooting with some recoil helps some folks.

    I would also move to the 120gr premium bullets for the 7mag.
    "You cannot invade the mainland United States. There would be a rifle behind each blade of grass."
    Japanese Admiral Yamamoto, 1941




    "A wise man's heart directs him toward the right, but a foolish man's heart directs him toward the left."
    Ecclesiastes 10:2:

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    Quote Originally Posted by dave43 View Post
    After only shooting .22 rifles at the range for marksmanship classes at my High School I purchased a 7mm Magnum for my deer gun from a recommendation from a friend. My first shot gave me a jolt and the scope gave me a nice cut on my eyelid. Ever since that first shot I have had a problem with flinching. I always anticipate the shot. It's embarrassing especially when shooting a smaller caliber at the range like a 9mm handgun. It is also effecting my sighting in of my new AR15. My groups are inconsistent. This handicap is frustrating. Any advice for this girly man?
    check out this thread. A bunch of experienced folks chimed in on this one, and you should find a ton of helpful info in here

    https://www.m4carbine.net/showthread.php?t=38001
    "Doc, can you check out this thing I got?"
    -Every Marine, ever.

  5. #5
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    I actually don't have issues with a shotgun. When I shoot a 12 gauge whether it's ducks or skeet I'm not anticipating the recoil as I'm engaged in what I'm trying to hit.

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    Dry fire and lots of it.

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    The dummy rounds mixed in with live rounds in your pistol and AR mags should help a lot. I had the same problem when I was in police academy and within a day my scores went from low 80% to high 90%. I don't know how you could do that with your 7mm Mag but doing it with your other guns and dry firing your 7mm should help quite a bit.


    Seems kind of mean to suggest a 7mm Magnum to a novice shooter.

  8. #8
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    The linked thread above is a great resource for pistol.
    Frankly, if you can shoot a pistol decently you will be able to shoot a rifle well.

    Flinch with long-guns has a few manifestations:
    Closing the firing eye before the shot is fired.
    Bucking the shoulder forward as the shot is fired.
    Jerking the trigger.
    In extreme examples the entire body will flinch, which is really bad.

    Dry and low-recoil practice with a meticulously adhered to shot process will help. Here is what I do for bulls-eye:

    Assume position, with natural point of aim and as much muscular relaxation as the position allows.
    Check NPOA by closing eyes, two deep breaths, stopping on the natural respiratory pause, then open sighting eye to verify NPOA.
    If NPOA is good:
    Selector is moved to Semi/Fire
    Trigger finger is placed on the trigger, applying slight pressure to fix finger on trigger.
    Deep breath, released to natural point of aim.
    Complete focus on the front sight, placed in the center of the target blur.
    Trigger finger applies smooth, gradually increasing pressure to the trigger until the shot breaks. While the trigger is being pressed, do not think about making the shot break, but focus on the gradual increase of pressure with the front sight being absolutely in focus.

    When you can do this with low recoil/dry fire, move to single live shots with the heavier recoiling weapon interspersed with several dry shots.

    It's what works for many, maybe it will help you.
    Jack Leuba
    Director, Military and Government Sales
    Knight's Armament Company
    jleuba@knightarmco.com

  9. #9
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    Have you tried standing very close behind & to the left of someone while they are shooting?

    With eye & ear pro and tell them in advance of course. The shots would be a total surprise and just try to focus on their front sight blade without blinking. Yes the front sight isn't the same from the side angle but...

  10. #10
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    7 Mag scope eye. Fun stuff. The first thing I would do with that rifle is make sure you have enough eye relief. If you can't get enough with the scope you have, invest in one better suited for the gun. It's not going to do you any good to improve your flinch, only to be whacked in the face again and go back to square one.

    One thing I've noticed that really seems to help people who are just moving to larger caliber rifles is improved hearing protection. When you think about it, even from a rifle like a 7mm the actual recoil isn't really worse than getting punched in the shoulder. But that very loud bang that comes with it isn't friendly to the senses. It makes the experience seem much more violent than it really is. If you haven't, try doubling up good plugs and muffs, or wear good electronic protection.

    This doesn't carry over so much to smaller guns, but it should help you with the 7mm Mag.

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