dry fire practice

Thirties

New member
When dry firing a new pistol, using snap caps of course, is there any benfit to the smoothing of the trigger action; or is the dry fire exercise only of benefit to the shooters hand/finger control?

If there is a benefit to the smoothing of trigger function, is dry firing repeatedly (with snap caps) a good idea?

Thanks
 
Dry firing is always a good idea. Trigger job or not, dry firing improves on the basics and fundamentals so that when you get out to the range, a lot of things are "automatic".

I'd go so far as to say that dry firing can actually help smooth the trigger function as it speeds up the process of friction and wear on those moving parts that may need a bit of tweaking.
 
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