 I hope that you're dry firing like five to 15 minutes every day. Don't worry about dry firing for like three hours or something a day just do five to 15 minutes of intentional dry fire every day and you're going to get a lot better. Hey everyone Dylan Schumacher, Citadel Defense and we're back with another edition of this kind of long-running dry fire series that we've been working on here. And today is just a quick tip on dry firing your rifles, right? So hopefully you have a rifle and hopefully you're doing a lot of dry fire with it. One thing that I've found recently that's helpful is that when I'm practicing multiple shots with my rifle I've started locking my bolt to the rear and just running it like that because, Grant thumb this with me here a little bit, as you lock that bolt to the rear you can get a little bit of trigger movement, right? And if you pull that trigger hard I'm able to focus on multiple targets, right? So when I do target transitions I want to do dry fire and I'm going to come up and I'm going to hit this one over here and I'm going to swing to this one over here. I'm able to still work that trigger without the getting that click and now I just kind of have a dead trigger. Now if that's how you want to run it and you want to get your click on that first one and then run a dead trigger on the other ones that's totally up to you. You do what you want but I found it helpful for me to just lock the bolt to the rear and then as I'm working on those target transitions I have a more consistent trigger pull and it's just helpful. If you're intentionally pulling the trigger hard if you're going to intentionally pull that trigger hard with your bolt lock to the rear that is really going to simulate as best you can. Again it's dry fire, right? Nothing's ever going to be as good as live fire but it's going to really help simulate having to manage that gun through recoil in that when you're pulling the trigger hard that you got to keep the gun steady so it's not moving about and to simulate again that actual trigger break, right? Because you're probably looking at depending on your rifle whatever maybe a five six pound trigger pull. Again just gerand thumb this with me, right? So I'm looking at right there it's probably about five six pounds. When we lock that bolt to the rear what I'm looking at is just a little bit of movement, right? So it's a little bit more movement than when I actually pull the trigger but if I'm intentionally pulling that hard and I'm finding to keep the gun steady it'll work as a dry fire technique. Try it out hopefully it'll be helpful for you for when you're dry firing your rifle. Again hope you're doing that every day and it's going to better allow you to simulate multiple shots and or target transitions. Just a little thought for your dry fire routine. Do brave deeds and indoor.