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... after 30 years of playing with 92's I got my hands on a 66 (early uberti 44/40) - if you never jammed your trigger finger rapid firing a 92 you maybe never know the difference and wouldnt understand - Browning/Winchester overlooked it too.
No, can't say that I've had that experience. I just racked both my B-92 and the new Rossi as fast as I possibly could many times and I'm at a loss as to how you jammed your fingers.- not fingers - just me trigger finger - look at em side by side - a lot more room in the lever loop of a 66 forward of the trigger and the trigger has less curl - I always kept my trigger finger inside the loop as I worked it and the soft part of my trigger finger ended up just right where that lil button thingy on the riflemans 92 sets - almost drove the tip of the trigger thru me finger tip as I slammed the lever shut - I was 20 years old at the time - but it hurt enough I remembered - I can hammer a 66 and not even think about it I'm more into to hitting a 'B' zone sized target at 25 yds than I am a speed shooter on 16" targets at 7m. That's the stuff that ruined CAS.yeah agree with that to some degree - mousefart loads dont help either - when ya can hear the hammer fall over the muzzle blast somethin is seriously amiss - I dont shoot CAS - by time I came along the ruin was well established - and for an aussie raised in the bush and round horses the Texas costuming is waaaay over the top - just do a couple of rapid fire events at out local blackpowder club - but we have some fun - start with gun empty, gun and ammo on the ground, and raise as much hell as ya can in a minute (timed) - but target at 25 yards and ya need to stay inside six inches to be competitive - full case blackpowder loads - 20 hits would be seriously good shooting.
In 17 years, no one has yet shot our annual match clean. We have bobbing targets, poppers, flying targets in most stages that present a real challenge. People like it and keep coming back with friends.
That's why we do it! Shooting hard to miss targets at close range gets old very quickly.One of our biggest annual shoots used to be the same kind of challenge back in the era of one gun. Then I took a hiatus from the sport, returning in the era of two guns.Things had changed. Gone were the challenging targets and we were shooting rifles at pistol distances. Accuracy side matches like the Duelling Tree were no longer done because people couldn't hit the plates!Real loads had given way to pop guns loads where the bullet hitting steel made more noise than the report of the rifle. The .39 Spl. was te calibre of choice.At a recent SASS Championship, 28 shooters out of 125 shot clean matches. It was no longer an accomplishment like it used to be.[/quoteThat is kind of pathetic!-specially if the winners come from the " others" group