I find that easiest way to stack a double-action trigger is to insert your trigger finger more fully through the triggerguard so the fleshy pad between the first and second joints is in contact with the trigger. As you pull though to the stop point, the tip of your trigger finger will touch the side of the frame and give you total control of the trigger in the stacked position. At that point, simply squeezing your grip a bit harder will usually break the shot. The LCR can safely be dry fired so there’s no reason not to practice this valuable technique until it’s mastered.

How does it shoot? I shot regular and high velocity loads on targets at 15 yards as well as CCI shotshells at 6' and 10'.

The effectiveness of the CCI shotshell loads are reflected in the two Champion brand prairie dog targets. The LCR really throws some impressive killing patterns. If you tramp around in venomous snake country or fish where cottonmouths lurk, an LCR loaded with half a cylinder of shotshells would be very comforting.

On targets at 15 yards, the LCR’s short 3-3/4" sight radius called for some hard holding. I learned two things about the gun. First, it favors standard velocity, Long Rifle ammunition for sheer accuracy. In fact, CCI’s new “Quiet-22” loading turned in the best, 5-shot groups which averaged 2" while high-velocity loads like Winchester’s Power-Point and CCI’s Mini-Mag spread from 2-1/2" to 3-3/4".