Bought three handguns before the ban, should I focus on training with one of them?

qch777

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So I got a P320, Glock 48, and a Shadow 2 before the ban. In terms of accuracy, unsurprisingly, Shadow 2 > P320 > Glock. So far, I've been alternating guns every time I go to the range, but I was wondering if I should try to practice with one gun and get really good at it first?

If that's the case, should I start with the Shadow 2, because it's the most accurate? Or start with something less accurate, just to practice and drill the fundamentals?

Thanks!
 
You’ve got all 3, why not train to be accurate with them all. I had trouble getting the hang of my Glocks and tended to shoot my CZ’s more, however, that has changed over time. Now, with practice I’m good with my Glocks and it was just amount of trigger time to accomplish it. The guns themselves seem to always be more capable than we are. My two cents, take the Glock and P320 out more, you can always go back to the CZ.
 
It depends on your experience and proficiency level with handguns.
If you are relatively new, get good with one, then expand.
Shooting with a crappy trigger often hides user mistakes.
Chasing shiny objects (switching guns) makes it hard to measure progress.
I’d suggest take the Black Badge course, create a training plan with measurable objectives, shoot the Shadow 2 for 6-8k rounds, then reassess.
 
I trained mostly with my polymer frame 9mm $. Then started using my all metal 9mm $$$. The difference was incredible. I believe being stuck in the long wait time of a june 3rd transfer has helped me because i was stuck with a polymer.
 
I would develop the fundamentals with the Shadow 2, then once shooting tight groups with that, focus on maintaining those same fundamentals with the P320 and then the G48. I found for myself if I can shoot tight groups with my G48, then I can shoot just about anything well lol. That includes my 929 in double action. I have seen a lot of people get frustrated learning on Glocks. The standard Glock trigger takes a lot of discipline and good technique to stay on target throughout the long mushy trigger pull.
 
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