I definitely do that.Vertical group is because you are pulling the trigger when sight picture looks good.
I definitely do that.
Thank you for the feedback and suggestions all. I think once I get the group down to 3ish inches I will buy a 9mm. I'm not yet into spending a ton of money on ammo so I'd probably still shoot the .22 75% of the time.
I don't really have any competition or other goals. I just want to be very proficient with a semi auto. I want my experience with the 9mm to transfer well to other 9mm production guns. So I'm wondering if this would be true of the new Walther Q5 Match? I think I am in love with ît.
Here's my group on paper from today at 25y. Ignore the 12g slug hole...
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I feel like my biggest issue is still sight picture. Spreading the gaps for windage is easy, and it looks like I'm pretty tight...but I put a lot of effort into lining up the elevation on my PPQ .22lr sights. However I think I was pretty consistent with this group. What am I doing wrong to have such an oblong group? If I can tighten vertical up as tight as the horizontal I'd have a bit over a 2" group and I'd be super happy with that.
Those shoot-n-see high-visibility reactive targets encourage you to change your visual focus to the target instead of keeping it where it belongs - on the front sight.
If that's what you're been using, they probably aren't doing you any favours.
You won't find bullseye shooters practicing with them.
try to use a standard NRA B-8 @ 25 yard so that we have some perspective.
Vertical group is because you are pulling the trigger when sight picture looks good. let gun wiggle and squeeze until it breaks.
A couple of my better targets from today at 25y. Was definitely hoping for better.
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Shooting starts at around 5:00 :
Okay so I took this into consideration. Ate healthy and took it easy on my caffeine and beer consumption the day of and before:As the distance moves out obviously the patterns become a touch larger. Still, these ARE larger compared to your 19 yard results by more than the increase in distance can account for.
What you're finding now is that the small stuff is going to matter. Like how long before shooting did you drink any coffee? Or were you hungry or just ate or any number of other factors that might affect your ability to hold the sight picture steady enough.



























