Apparently it's unsafe to shoot at a target from the bench 10m away and perfectly inline with the backstop...
The B-27 targets used to be what we used when the score was out of 300. The course of fire changed in about '98 or '99 I think, and the targets changed at the same time.
And thanks. Shooting was ok, I haven't had much trigger time since June, today was the 3rd time since then that I've been able to shoot. My 10m and further groups are usually better, but for not shooting recently, I can't complain too much.
If you want to get better at shooting, going to the range without a goal and a plan is no different than going to the gym with no workout plan or routine. You end up making a bunch of noise, but not accomplishing much. Sure, you may eventually improve and get a little better, but you'll reach a ceiling much sooner, and have a lot of really bad habits or training scars.
So the Glock 17 Gen 4 is my first true pistol. I have taken it to the range about five times now. Each time I dumped 500 rounds through it.
Started off with targets but they have these metal plates setup that give a nice *ping* when you hit them, and since my groupings were complete utter ####, I decided I would just focus on hitting the metal plate consistently at 25 yards first, using the audible *ping* as feedback for when I hit/didn't hit.
Starting to get better now but here is something I noticed. When the sights are completely flush (just like how I was taught with a buckmark pistol) the Glock 17 gets really ####ty accuracy. Sometimes I can dump a whole mag and only get two hits.
The metal plates setup at 25 yards that I'm shooting at are slightly smaller then the average human torso. They are a V shape with the bottom of the V pointing towards the ground, so the target gets skinnier towards the bottom just so you can understand.
So like I said, when the sights are flush, I rarely hit. If I "tip" the front sight ever so slightly higher so it "protrudes" from the sight picture above the rear sights and isn't flush anymore, everything is bang on. So I've been doing this, but at the same time I don't want to learn improper shooting technique (like writing left handed) and to my knowledge, the gun should shoot straight when the sights are flush.
If I have to "tip" the sight upwards to get consistent accuracy/hits doesn't that mean the gun is shooting LOW? Especially with the targets I'm shooting at being very narrow towards the bottom, couldn't that mean that if the sights are set flush on the target and the gun shoots low that is the reason why most hits are missing when I shoot like that?
Please inform, would like to get better.
Good shooting, can you duplicate that with that 12 or 13lb trigger pull that the smith has?
Yup. But the trigger is in the 8-12 range. Although anything under 10 is a rare find.
I'm probably a little better at 15m with it as well since I've shot the gun so much... I'll give it a try next week when I'm back on the range.
As opposed to the ultimate Segal typr presscheck which started it all.
The more pressing of the presschecks.
Dont do it like Steven Segal lol
Do you do press checks on your duty guns?
Non-duty guns, which are Glocks, I use the loaded chamber indicator. A quick feel with the weak-hand thumb is quick and easy.
Ahhh you're going to die........ Ahhhhhhh
Press checks are done by smart people who dont want to hear clicksome higher end military units do it too
Its done after a load/ready by pulling back on the slide about a 1/2" to insp if a round was chambered. If a round was not chamber your mag may have not been seated properly "Tap rack time"



























