MD Driver, I agree! Open stance and relax, be flexible/nimble, same as most other sports. I shoot a 577NE and a 500.Sorry about the necro of this old thread; I’m enjoying the topic and the replies.
One important thing I’ve found when shooting a Lott is stance. I was coached about this, so it’s certainly no brain power from me. The idea is to open up your body to the target, ie shoot more “shotgun-like” with your shoulders more square to what you’re aiming. That will allow more of the mass of your upper torso to absorb the recoil, rather than just your shoulder area if, if your shoulders are lined up with your direction of fire. No doubt boilerplate for you experienced folks, so just FWIW.
Disclaimers…. 6’3”, 215 lbs, using a Mauser M03 in .458 Lott, so gun mass and dude mass might also be helping. Either way, I’m not finding the Lott to be terrible at all.
You are right, the Lott is not terrible. You just have to relax and "make friends" with it.
Good shooting to all you guys. Brian
PS. Try squeezing the trigger slowly so that when the rifle fires it is kind of a surprise to you. That way you can start the habit of not tightening up (flinch) when the trigger breaks.
Another trick that works like a charm is get someone else to load the rifle for and sometimes he secretly loads an empty case. That will mitigate any flinching habit and help greatly with the perceived recoil. (Try it a few times, ancient Chinese secret. Some people don't realize it but a flinch will emphasize the perceived recoil. Some times we don't realize when we are flinching.)
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