Most pistol shooters have very poor concepts of the fundamentals (myself included).
It is easy to read about the fundamentals but it is hard to employ them. Most average shooters can master a few of the fundamentals on their own, the real challenge is bringing them all together to produce a good grouping (consistency). The opening of the magpul handgun video has a rundown of the fundamentals and they do a good job of highlighting the mistakes and the results of using some fundamentals while going weak on others. I found that a really good visualization and clarification of the problems most handgunners are seeing.
As has been stated, 1911 will hide your faults easily do to the short light trigger. You just adopt bad habits and when you move to firearm with a heavier trigger, longer pull and different grip, your groups open up.
I used to think the same way about my glock... then an experienced shooter used my pistol to push the black out of a pistol target at 25 yards... I was embarrassed to say the least. He gave me a run down of all the things he saw me doing wrong, the glock was just transcribing my mistakes on paper. He coached me live fire over the hour and my groups shrunk instantly.
My advice, get an experienced shooter to coach you. Hell most shooters sit around silently judging you anyway, you may as well give them the benefit of speaking whats on their minds
TDC made some exceptional points early in this thread, so re-read his posts, I find he is the most consistent contributor of good advice in the pistol forum and offers thorough explanations.
It is easy to read about the fundamentals but it is hard to employ them. Most average shooters can master a few of the fundamentals on their own, the real challenge is bringing them all together to produce a good grouping (consistency). The opening of the magpul handgun video has a rundown of the fundamentals and they do a good job of highlighting the mistakes and the results of using some fundamentals while going weak on others. I found that a really good visualization and clarification of the problems most handgunners are seeing.
As has been stated, 1911 will hide your faults easily do to the short light trigger. You just adopt bad habits and when you move to firearm with a heavier trigger, longer pull and different grip, your groups open up.
I used to think the same way about my glock... then an experienced shooter used my pistol to push the black out of a pistol target at 25 yards... I was embarrassed to say the least. He gave me a run down of all the things he saw me doing wrong, the glock was just transcribing my mistakes on paper. He coached me live fire over the hour and my groups shrunk instantly.
My advice, get an experienced shooter to coach you. Hell most shooters sit around silently judging you anyway, you may as well give them the benefit of speaking whats on their minds
TDC made some exceptional points early in this thread, so re-read his posts, I find he is the most consistent contributor of good advice in the pistol forum and offers thorough explanations.





















































