Liberty wrote:I guess you have a point, I just never put much stock trigger pull differences. For some strange reason, I shoot my Ruger best although the DA pull has been described as horrible and the SA as terrible, Trigger seems pretty good to me though and I shoot the same on Double as Single. I'm not what I consider a real good shooter, but can keep a magful in a 6 inch circle at 7 yards and most in at 15 yards. Lots of room for improvement, hopefully good enough to keep me out of trouble. My thinking is that we don't need to be tack drivers to be successful in a defensive situation. just well trained and familiar with the tools at our disposal. Trigger difference between SA and DA seem to be better suited for those who like driving tacks or making single holes. I suppose though one can never be too acurate.
Liberty, from your post above your choice of weapon seems to work fine for you and I wouldn't suggest any change.
One thing to keep in mind is that, in a life threatening situation when the adrenaline dumps and your heart rate doubles, one of the first abilities you lose is fine motor coordination - as in trigger control. Gross motor abilities, on the other hand, improve. What tends to happen is that, with a heavy first shot pull, that application of gross motor function is overdone and the shot is often jerked off target. Then the same gross, heavy pull is applied to some or all of the subsequent single action shots with significant effects on accuracy. Once again, this can be overcome by extensive training, but it can also reappear unexpectedly under stress.
This phenomenon affects single action and straight DA pulls to some extent as well, but the transition from one pull to another after the first shot appears to be more of an issue in actual incidents.
One of these days I'm going to put together a post on the psychophysiological effects of life threatening stress on performance. It will help to make topics like this much easier to understand.