Well it was good enough when they taught me how to shoot and hold a pattern at 1000 yards in the Army. We where using dummy ammo but a .22 rifle is not going to hurt the firing pin by dry firing it. There is no other way to "feel" the trigger pull accurately. Unless you know exactly when the trigger is going to fire the shot how are you going to be accurate???
Maybe if you want to be a half good shot you do not have to have that knowledge. If you want to be a good shot you need to know that for every gun you own/use.
I own a pair of Colt 1911 45 cal pistols. I have shot over 20,000 rounds through them. I can tell you within thousandths when they are going to fire. I have won bets with my sons over this. A small piece of clay under the trigger will measure how far you pull the trigger. Pull as close as you can to not firing. Then do it over and make it fire. You can measure the difference. I have done it with the difference being under .005 between the two. Used to be able to get under .003. Hands are not as good any more.
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Today's Featured Article - Upgrading an Oliver Super 55 Electrical System - by Dennis Hawkins. My old Oliver Super 55 has been just sitting and rusting for several years now. I really hate to see a good tractor being treated that way, but not being able to start it without a 30 minute point filing ritual every time contributed to its demise. If it would just start when I turn the key, then I would use it more often. In addition to a bad case of old age, most of the tractor's original electrical system was simply too unreliable to keep. The main focus of this page is to show how I upgr
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