1) Try keeping your body more square to the target and using a more isoceles position for your arms.
2) You will wobble a LOT more with a pistol than a long gun, don't worry. Practice will help with that.
3) Try to relax, you are too tense if you are bagged after 50 rounds of 9mm.
4) If the M&P9 fits you the best and you shoot it well, then that is the gun for you.
5) Do LOTS of dry firing at home, concentrating on the front sight and work on keeping the gun steady through the trigger pull and break. Once you can dry fire and keep it steady, you can do it at the range.
6) Watch this video by Todd Jarret on shooting: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ysa50-plo48 Search on his name on YouTube and you will find a bunch more. Also search on "IPSC shooting" and there are many instructional videos to watch.
Mark
Someone(not an expert, but a gun shop clerk) also suggested that I use a "laser bore sighter" to look for movement when I pull a trigger. Agree? Or is this more fallacy?
About a month ago somrone posted a target and it had been divided into pie shapes and for each shape they had a reason why youwere shooting where you were. The pie showed that I was pulling my gun down and to the left, it was my trigger control or lack of it. If anyone has a copy of this would you please repost it.
Thanks
Bruce
Buy a .22 !
I don't get this trend to buy a 9, 40, or whatever as a first pistol.
As a wise man once said...shooting a pistol is like playing a piano - practice, practice, practice.
There are many aspects to marksmanship - stance, grip, vision, breath control, timing, trigger control, follow through.....
Whether you are shooting a pistol or a rifle the single best item you can buy is a .22.
The cost of .22 ammo is a fraction of the cost of centerfire ammo. If you are seriuos about learning to shoot well it is all about practice. Buy a gun you can afford to shoot!
This thread, and many other threads like it, contain all kinds of good advice but nothing beats range time.....practice... practice.... practice...
John

since it's friday and i haven't had my lunch yet, i'm gonna do this:
1 - if you wanna learn to play the piano, does it make sense to learn on a toy xylophone with those painted metal bits, or a small $49.95 walmart electric piano that has completely different key spacing and weight and no real tactile feedback? or can you learn to read sheet music and hear the tones to develop your ear just as well while sitting in front of a Bosendorfer? the Bosendorfer will sound just as eerie playing a minor 7th as will a cheap Casio, no matter how many times you practice that minor 7th.
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2 - stance, grip, vision, breath control - gee, do any of those have anything to do with the size of the round that's currently chambered (since it hasn't been fired yet)? i'm thinking no...
3 - what if the cost of ammo isn't an issue for certain people? maybe some hobbyists earn over $100k per year and spending a few hundred on ammo isn't impossible for them. or maybe they don't spend $$$ on smokes n booze n wings n pizza n other stuff, so they can allocate more to THIS particular sport?
My first comment is that this entire discussion assumes that someone WANTS to become a better shooter.
Stance, grip, vision etc, have a HUGE difference in preparation for the round you are going to be firing. Why? Get any of them wrong and the worse your score is going to be.
A centrefire is less forgiving of small mistakes than a rimfire. Also, a larger calibre will cover up mistakes making it much more difficult to figure out what you are doing wrong and correct it.
3) Ammo costs are significant for most people if they are shooting much. Compare cheap 9mm ammo at $200/1000 to rimfire at $60/1000. I can shoot 3.33 times as much rimfire for the same $$.
ok, so i've had my salad (DAMN GOOD) and now having a fruit parfait, so here goes some more:
if stance / grip / vision / etc have a HUGE difference, then why learn and train on 22LR if the goal of shooting is going to be on a different caliber anyways? unless i'm reading it wrong, you're saying that the stance / grip / vision that you'd use when firing a 22LR is going to be vastly different than what you'd use when firing a 9mm. so, once you start shooting the 9mm, you'll have to re-learn it all anyways... that IS what you're saying, isn't it?
ok, here you're contradicting yourself. first you say centerfire is less forgiving of mistakes (compared to rimfire). then, you say that larger caliber (which ends up being centerfire) will cover up mistakes. so - which is it? is it less forgiving, or will it cover them up?
if you were shooting ONLY the 9mm, how many rounds would you shoot in a year?
sometimes, the 3x cost factor isn't a real issue. sure, it could be 3x higher, but does the total expense during the year add up to a significant portion of your disposable income? $10 versus $30 on a $5,000 budget is not as significant as $1,000 versus $3,000 on a $5,000 budget.
edit:
to use another analogy, i drive a V8 truck and ride a motorbike. the truck is THIRSTY, but overall my fuel costs per year are still less than 5% of my income, so driving a Corolla wouldn't save me THAT much overall (plus i'd now have power steering and gas pedal issues)
if you were shooting ONLY the 9mm, how many rounds would you shoot in a year?



























