diff, welcome to Production.
When you draw and present your first shot, soon as you've established your two-handed grip use the motion of pushing the gun out to prep the DA trigger down to 3#, so that at full extension the trigger is very close to breaking the shot.
Prepping during the push does not destabilize the gun, as the whole movement starts with the powerful shoulder muscles. The prepping almost stabilizes the gun, and certainly it leaves very little effort to overcome at full presentation.
With practice, at full extension, you flash confirm your sight picture as your finger movement continues (don't stop the squeeze) and you trip what then amounts to a SA trigger. After awhile, at the close and eventually at the medium distances, your muscle memory will be such that you just know the sight pic IS THERE: so no need to flash confirm or stop the trigger press.
It boils down to:
- draw
- acquire full grip
- push out and prep trigger all the way through the presentation
- bang.
I did this for the first time ever at the last match -and hit the B-zone. The RO said the look on my face was priceless. Now if I can only make this a routine event. It is really hard to trust that at full presentation our sight picture is good, rather than stopping the trigger press to verify that it is good, then finishing the trigger press.
Anyone here who can express this differently is welcome to jump in.