I remembered and changed putting my trigger on my throttle. Had same issue. One of the failures in sniping with a rifle, or hand gun, is when you pull the trigger. Chances are yank that trigger and your round is off target. It takes habit of muscle memory to just use the tip of the finger. Some will tense their whole grip and blow the shot.
Good example I have,
On my .50 cal rifle i have two triggers. The front one can set the rear as hair-pin trigger. With no scope and HP invoked I can lay the round center target from 250’. Normal action puts me off center or worse.
Putting my AH trigger on throttle removes multi action when dispatching rounds.
I finally remembered I did that about two mos ago. <blank stare> ugh!
i tried the trigger on throttle thing a long time ago but never got used to it. It definitely is a good way to get rid of that pull action on the stick though. I may try again.
For years, shooting instructors, even at the best schools out there, focuses SO much on fire control (trigger press), and that being the critical part of making accurate shots, pressing that trigger in just that "proper" way.
Shrek McPhee, the best instructor I was trained by (friend and co worker of AH member WpnX, US army SF/SMU etc), has flipped the script around, as we've ALL been putting the cart before the horse. I'm talking EVERYONE at the higher level small arms fighting/shooting schools, from my alma mater (Sig Sauer Academy), to Rogers shooting school, Thunder ranch - ie everyone, has adapted to this new training method -
Fire control/trigger press is actually irrelevant. Your stance/position, and most critically your grip on your firearm, is what truly matters. Keep that stance/grip perfectly isolated with regards to your sight picture, and I can stand/prone/whatever beside you, stick a pen in your trigger guard, and whack your trigger silly, and you'll shoot the best groups, hits, etc. The focus has now become this - instead of focusing on making a great trigger press, and your secondary consideration being your grip/position, now it's about primarily keeping your position/stance/grip/sight alignment, as perfectly aligned as you can, and letting the trigger press happen as it needs to.
It's the same as shooting in this sim, or any sim - not having your sight picture/alignments be effected by your trigger press.
The idea to move the trigger to your throttle, IMO is actually a good way to get the mentality of what I'm describing. Right hand/stick keeping the best alignment you can do, and isolating the trigger from that hand, in order to have a disconnect from the trigger press physically. IMO after shooting that way for a short time, you would be able to move the trigger back to you right hand stick trigger. Some may not benefit from this as much, but doing it is never the less a valid thing to try in order to see its effect on your shooting.
Great thread, interesting. BigR, you were such a force in terms of E and angles fighting, I remember once you giving me tips on the P51 back in the 13th TAS days, and it did a ton for me back then. Hope to see you in the air some time here.
I'll link in a couple brief videos on this subject that are on Youtube. John McPhee was the best shooting instructor I've trained with, and his emphasis on your grip/stance over the trigger press is demonstrated in a couple vids.
The relevant info is at around 3:44 in this one.