Email or username:

Password:

Forgot your password?
Top-level
Schroedinger

@mdstevens0612 @saltphoenix It is more that the bow has to be held loosely not gripped. and you have to stay in position until after the arrow has gone - which is fractionally after the string is released, and the power of the shot goes through your arm.

4 comments
(Matthew)=> return 🏳‍🌈🇿🇦🎮💻📖

@SteveClough @saltphoenix Gun shooting has more of a "gently squeeze" so the force of pulling the trigger doesn't move your aim, but you do have to be rigid enough that the kick doesn't send the gun flying towards your face. If there's a stock or heel then you have to be rigid enough so the force of the gun firing doesn't move your aim but loose enough so that your body can absorb the kick. Bows want to follow the arrow, guns violently explode away from the bullet. In my experience, anyway.

Kaspi

@mdstevens0612 Air pistols have basically no recoil. Holding it with two hands (or placing the gun on a support beam as is allowed in senior leagues over a certain age) significantly improves stability while shooting. But the Olympic discipline seen here requires a one-handed free-standing grip. It is totally normal to have the off-hand in a pocket or hooked into a belt to support tension in the body's core which improves overall stability and reduces sway. There is nothing special in his stance

Kaspi

@mdstevens0612 Ear-protection is not necessarily required. Air guns are not very loud (but in smaller rooms the popping noise may still produce loudness spikes from which one wants to protect) but the surroundings (e.g. the audience) are. So wearing any kind of noise protection here is just for concentration and follows personal preference.
Same with the glasses: most shooters in static precision shooting prefer to focus on their primary eye. Closing the other would lead to squinting and...

Kaspi

@mdstevens0612 ...a change in focus in the dominant eye. Therefore, they wear an occluder over the non-aiming eye instead to reduce distraction without the need to close that eye. However, not everyone needs that. One can train to just ignore the input from the other eye. Or if you don't see very well with it anyway, you can more easily focus on the dominant eye and thus don't need to block the other (that's the case for me).

Go Up