igofast wrote:While I'm not necessarily for or against this device, please let me know what firing range you guys are at that people still have their finger on the trigger as they are leaving or off the line. I want to stay away. Personally I have not encountered such an occurrence.
As others have stated - the release trigger is nothing new, some shotgunner's swear by them. There was also a release trigger for benchrest - but I can't find the reference now for the life of me.
May be handy for controlled pairs, obviously doesn't work too well for mag dumps(not that those are practical). For now I'll put it in the 'novelty' column like bumpfire stocks and Taccon forced reset triggers.
As I understand them, the traditional utilization of release-fire triggers are to mitigate trigger jerk and flinching impulses- mostly among clay target shooters.
People slip on spent rounds, stumble, bump into benches, each other, aim/ sweep above the berms/ at the ceiling, get distracted in the extreme by the thunder-boomer in the next lane, and even drop guns.
The results of doing so with the trigger depressed with this thing aren't difficult to imagine.
As to the previous remark about big boomer pistols- youtube is full of asshats with a S&W 500 barrell off-target 90°+, often over the shoulder of the shooter; a second round fired at that moment wouldn't be pretty.
Stand by her with a binary trigger