Excellent! Minimal gun movement. Another example is a long tower-based crosser staring way out of gun range and gradually getting closer. Or a shot at an incoming target from a bridge where the target is 25 yards below the shooter.
Then you'll get that low, hard right and your going to be chasing that target to hell and back because it was blocked from view by your barrell. This may work better on sporting clays where you have a set target line. That all changes with a trap setup with the wobble turned on. Just my 2 cents worth.
The main concept is to set up to see the target early and to minimize gun movement. You would have a lot more movement shooting wobble trap. Thanks for the comment.
@DeanBlanchard I completely understand the concept of minimizing gun movement. Some people take everything they see on the net to heart, and all of the sudden your the bad guy because your tip didn't work in the scenario they were shooting in. Just an observation. Thanks for the video.
Totally makes sense. Thanks Dean.
You’re welcome
Nicely done!
Thanks
Excellent! Minimal gun movement. Another example is a long tower-based crosser staring way out of gun range and gradually getting closer. Or a shot at an incoming target from a bridge where the target is 25 yards below the shooter.
Great examples!
… keep your eyes open😆
😄
Then you'll get that low, hard right and your going to be chasing that target to hell and back because it was blocked from view by your barrell. This may work better on sporting clays where you have a set target line. That all changes with a trap setup with the wobble turned on. Just my 2 cents worth.
The main concept is to set up to see the target early and to minimize gun movement. You would have a lot more movement shooting wobble trap.
Thanks for the comment.
@DeanBlanchard
I completely understand the concept of minimizing gun movement. Some people take everything they see on the net to heart, and all of the sudden your the bad guy because your tip didn't work in the scenario they were shooting in.
Just an observation. Thanks for the video.
your whole premise assumes a specific methodology .. maybe ok for a beginner lesson ...