SIRT TruBreak
Train your trigger control nearly anywhere. The first dedicated trigger‑control training device from NextLevel Training—maker of the SIRT Training Platforms.
Why TruBreak
Trigger control is simple to understand—yet difficult to master. The definition of trigger control is breaking the shot without moving the muzzle. TruBreak allows unconstrained left/right travel so your trigger finger must act independently: press straight back, reset, and re‑prep.
If you execute improper mechanics (push left/right), the trigger “drops into the gutter,” you get a dead trigger, perform quick remedial action, and jump right back into high‑volume, self‑diagnostic training.
How It Works
TruBreak gives your trigger finger freedom to move. Clean mechanics keep the muzzle steady for a crisp break. Miss the line and it gutters—forcing a reset and reinforcing proper form. Over time, you build the habit loop: break → reset → re‑prep.
For less than a box or two of ammo, you can get a TruBreak and start the path to pistolcraft mastery with high‑volume, self‑diagnostic training.
What You’ll Feel
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Smoother, straighter presses with proper reset and re‑prep.
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Immediate correction when mechanics drift left/right.
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Faster progress through beginner to mastery using key‑based progressions.
How to Train with the TruBreak
Master Trigger Control with the SIRT TruBreak — Simple Progressions, Real Carryover
The SIRT TruBreak lets you scale trigger-control training from beginner to advanced—no tools, instant feedback, and real-world transfer to live fire. In this 6-minute walkthrough, Mike shows how to use the interchangeable keys, the fin, and simple sight-management tricks to build clean break → reset → reprep mechanics that hold up under speed, awkward positions, and one-handed shooting.
What you’ll learn
- How the swappable keys change difficulty (narrower landing = harder, wider = easier)
- Using the fin for instant visual feedback—and then removing that “visual crutch”
- Building from bench reps to full presentation and compromised positions
- Training break → reset → reprep at speed without pinning the trigger
- Why these mechanics carry over platform-independently to live fire, especially SHO/WHO
Progressions (easy → hard)
- Choose your key: Start wider for forgiveness; move to narrower as control improves.
- Watch the fin: Use visual feedback to eliminate push/arc/loop—press straight back, then forward to reset.
- Look away from the fin: Rep the same mechanics without visual help.
- Full presentation: Build a locked-in grip and run clean presses while maintaining sight picture.
- Use the shield: Snap it on to block the fin at extension—no visual cue, just feel.
- Compromised positions: Train around corners, low ports, odd leans—keep the press clean under awkward ergonomics.
- Go at speed: Break → reset → reprep rapidly—make correct mechanics your only neuromuscular option.
Regressions (make it easier when needed)
- Swap to a wider key (bigger landing platform).
- Watch the fin again for a few reps to re-clean the press.
- Slow down to deliberate, single reps—then re-build speed.
Daily use tips
- Do quick, uncalibrated micro-reps throughout the day—pick it up, get a perfect press, move on.
- Test carryover at the range, especially strong-hand only and support-hand only—you’ll feel the difference.
For instructors
Lightweight, inexpensive, and toolless key swaps make TruBreak a must-have coaching aid. Great for demoing fundamentals, diagnosing trigger errors, and giving students a fast win.