Go ahead and dry fire. O-rings, and faucet washers are the cheapest "stops" to put over a nipple to protect the hammer face, and nipple from being beaten up.
As for Target Panic, its called lots of different things depending on the sport or activity. Performers call it " stage fright". Golfers call it " the Yips". It is the failure to concentrate on the job at hand, and allowing yourself to be distracted by other things and people and sounds.
A National Champion Trap shooter, teaching my best friend to shoot Doubles Trap back in the 1970s, told him, when he asked, " Well, First you shoot the first target, and then you shoot the second target"! :surrender: :rotf: That sounds so simple it sounds " simple minded". But, in truth, when you get rid of all the other baggage, that is how you shoot Doubles.
Now, how to concentrate on the target and your sights, etc. is what escapes most shooters, regardless of the sport. There are plenty of great shooters who shoot great scores in practice, but fall apart in competition. They let everything bother them, and instead of thinking about THIS SHOT at THIS TARGET, they are thinking about a target they missed, their overall score, someone else's score, how many more targets or shots they have to shoot in the competition, etc. The DEFEAT THEMSELVES.
That is target panic. I have seen it all my shooting life in other shooters, some of whom I really respected after watching them practice.
You will develop a stance, mount, breathing, aiming, firing, and follow through routine or regimen, that you will use a shooter of a gun, just as you have as an archer. It takes at least a year of constant practice to get " smooth " as a shooter with your routine, and then another year of practice before you forget all about what you are doing, and simply begin focusing on that next shot. I would like to tell you that you can learn this faster, with some trick, but I don't know any. And, as an instructor, I have tried. As a shooter, I tried. I am still pretty new to shooting Sporting Clays, and I have not shot enough to have developed a rhythm and routine at that sport, so I still struggle. But, I don't get distracted, or panicked at the shot itself. Its the "Smooth" part I am still trying to acquire. I suspect I am going to have to go out to the range on a slow day, as I did to learn Skeet shooting, from a low mount position, and just shoot target from one position at a time all day long, until I feel I have mastered the point, and movement to break those targets at that station. I may have to shoot 500 targets at a station before I feel I have that shot licked, but if that is what needs to be done, That is what I will do. There is enough difference in sporting clays courses that you can't memorize shooting positions, or " spot shoot " your targets, as you can in Skeet shooting. But, I am not working on muscle memory, but on confidence in my ability to swing on the target correctly, regardless of where it flies.
Here are some personal tips that work for me:
When shooting a handgun or rifle, that requires aiming a sight, I focus not only on the front sight, but on an imaginary line I put down the middle of that sight, no matter how small or narrow the slight blade is, or how large or small the target is. The distance the target is from my barrel is irrelevant. Only wind speed, and direction as they may move my ball or bullet is of concern as I apply " kentucky" windage to put the projectile on the target. Slow fire shooting, differs from speed shooting, ONLY , in that in speed shooting, I do all my routine used to slow fire aimed shots FASTER! And doing speed shooting in practice will help you learn to be a better slow fire shooter, and vice versa.
Challenge yourself at the end of each day's practice. By that I mean, shooting at smaller targets, or at targets at a longer range. The harder targets will make standard targets seem easy in a shooting match.
Do what you like to do to get your mind off NOISE in the background. I was trained as a musician as a kid, so I hum quietly to myself some of the hardest music I learned to play, to busy my brain with this complex activity, and distract it from noises, and movements of people around me.
ONe of the worst situations any shooter can face is being SHOT AT. I hope you don't experience it ever. But, It puts a huge load of adrenalin into your bloodstream, which causes tunnel vision, and auditory exclusion, dry mouth, sweaty hands, and FEAR of being killed!
If in practice you can create stress that lets you experience any of these sensations, you will be better prepared if something or someone scares you half to death, and you are required to shoot to save your life, or the life of another innocent person.
To add stress, enter every contest you can. Shooting against better shooters is the only way you are going to improve. If you don't expect to win, and just shoot for the fun of competing, you will sneak a win some day that will surprise both you and the other shooters. My best friend had a standing $1.00 bet with another shooter who always wanted to beat him at Trap. Tom was an excellent Trap shooters, but he never got past the Target panic. If he missed a target, he was destroyed for the rest of the round. MY friend didn't let a miss bother him. He had missed thousands of targets over his years shooting Trap, including dozens of first, or last targets to end up shooting 99 out of 100 targets. Can you imagine how frustrating it is to miss the very first target, and then break the next 99 targets straight?? But, he got past it, finally, And broke lots of 100s.
You won't learn much shooting against shooters who are poorer shots than you are. Shoot against the big boys, and watch how they shoot. Study every part of their routine, and take lessons from the best of them all. Not everything they do will work for you, but give it a try in your practice sessions. Eventually, you will figure out what it is that you have to do to avoid Target panic, and to " Get 'er Done". :blah: :grin: :wink: :thumbsup: