Exactly my set-up -- it places the web & meat of hand -
where it needs to be -- and absorbs/controls recoil, SO THAT THE GUN DROPS RIGHT BACK WITH SIGHTS pretty much aligned. One is set up with a RH Barami Hip Grip, and the shape of it places my trigger finger just right, so that it in the same place for each succeeding shot. It didn't hurt to fill several coffee cans with spent .38 Special brass, when I got my first one: regular 158gr loads. Buffalo Bore is what stokes them for social use now, but don't remember off hand which , except that it is 158gr.
When you get them going good and still have the eyeballs to make out the sights crisply, that practiced trigger squeeze to the final nudge, and then tripping it like single action, will produce surprising hits on plinkables. But the really useful skill is the smooth cycling of the action with rock solid grip alignment.
Complete thread:
- High horn grips for a J-frame -
Catoosa,
2014-02-23, 22:07
- Craig Spegel -
Rob Leahy,
2014-02-23, 22:09
- Craig Spegel - Slow Hand, 2014-02-24, 04:42
- +1 Great guy with whom to deal - brionic, 2014-02-25, 18:47
- My 642... -
Hobie,
2014-02-24, 07:22
- Exactly my set-up -- it places the web & meat of hand - -
John Meeker,
2014-02-24, 12:26
- Same set up here on my #1 airweight Bodyguard. - MR, 2014-02-24, 15:20
- Thanks guys.. - Catoosa, 2014-02-25, 09:20
- Are the Tyler T-grips available again? I'd like to set up - BobM, 2014-02-25, 19:17
- Exactly my set-up -- it places the web & meat of hand - -
John Meeker,
2014-02-24, 12:26
- Craig Spegel -
Rob Leahy,
2014-02-23, 22:09