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Once the round ignites, the trigger is immediately allowed to return. The finger pressure used in compressing the trigger is relaxed and the trigger is allowed to return forward. The trigger finger should remain in contact with the trigger as it returns, but only slightly; any resistance will simply slow the trigger’s movement, and may cause some guns to bind. Maintain just enough contact so that you can feel when the trigger has stopped, at which point it is completely reset and ready for the next shot.

The trigger return should have the same speed as the compression. Like the compression, it should not vary during the trigger’s movement. If we step back and look at the trigger stroke as a complete action, except for the direction reversal it should look like a single movement.

Naturally we don’t want the muzzle to move off of alignment with the target during the compression, and we want to develop that same level of muzzle control during the return. With a long trigger stroke, there is a significantly larger amount of time that the revolver is spending resetting compared to an autoloader. If one wants to shoot a revolver both quickly and accurately, it’s necessary to start the trigger return immediately, as opposed to an auto shooter, who can afford to pause slightly before allowing the trigger to reset.

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