Tongarirohiker
CGN Regular
- Location
- Edmonton, AB
The idea of 'fit' came up in another thread, which obviously led to a fair bit of discussion. I'm of the camp that 'fit', as far as pistol shooting, means very little in comparison to the fundamentals. I see a lot of comparison between shooting and golf.
My dad's been with the CPGA for a lot of years. One of the things (which hasn't always helped his own bottom line) that bothers him is all of these guys buying new sets of golf clubs every year, or buying that new hot driver that's supposed to give you 10 more yards. Yes, graphite shafts can give you a little bit more clubhead speed. A more forgiving sweet spot can help minimize faults on off-plane, off-target swings. The problem is, they don't fix the root problem which is your fundamentals stink.
Many a time he has given a lesson to a guy who said that he bought a new driver and he couldn't hit it any further than his old one. The end result was many swings with a 5-iron until several fundamental flaws were fixed. At the end of the lesson, my dad would give them back their old driver and take a few swings. What magically appeared was the 10 extra yards they were looking for. When given back their new driver, they might have acheived an additional 5 yards on top of that.
So are the manufacturers lying? Not necessarily, but their claims are based on a "perfect" swing. In other words, most people are not good enough to get everything they can out of that new driver.
The same thing happens with a pistol. If it's your first pistol, simply put, you're not good enough to know what 'fit' should mean. I had my own 'first pistol' thread. I poo-poo'd certain pistols (Glock, Sig) cause I couldn't hit the broad side a barn with them. Coming back to them 8 months later, after a few thousand rounds and a lot of dryfire, my groups were closer to being equal regardless of the pistol. Further more, when my shots were off, I could feel and see what I was doing wrong. Grip pressure was too tight, too loose, anticipating recoil, etc. I calm down, get back to fundamentals, and bang, the holes are appearing where they're supposed to.
More importantly, that Glock which I so derided before? I'd actually consider adding it to the collection now. What changed? Experience. Practice.
So, I said that 'fit' means very little. Where does it matter? When you're working at a level most of us simply aspire to. Until you've reached a level of proficiency at something, I belive 'fit' is a convenient excuse.
Thoughts?
My dad's been with the CPGA for a lot of years. One of the things (which hasn't always helped his own bottom line) that bothers him is all of these guys buying new sets of golf clubs every year, or buying that new hot driver that's supposed to give you 10 more yards. Yes, graphite shafts can give you a little bit more clubhead speed. A more forgiving sweet spot can help minimize faults on off-plane, off-target swings. The problem is, they don't fix the root problem which is your fundamentals stink.
Many a time he has given a lesson to a guy who said that he bought a new driver and he couldn't hit it any further than his old one. The end result was many swings with a 5-iron until several fundamental flaws were fixed. At the end of the lesson, my dad would give them back their old driver and take a few swings. What magically appeared was the 10 extra yards they were looking for. When given back their new driver, they might have acheived an additional 5 yards on top of that.
So are the manufacturers lying? Not necessarily, but their claims are based on a "perfect" swing. In other words, most people are not good enough to get everything they can out of that new driver.
The same thing happens with a pistol. If it's your first pistol, simply put, you're not good enough to know what 'fit' should mean. I had my own 'first pistol' thread. I poo-poo'd certain pistols (Glock, Sig) cause I couldn't hit the broad side a barn with them. Coming back to them 8 months later, after a few thousand rounds and a lot of dryfire, my groups were closer to being equal regardless of the pistol. Further more, when my shots were off, I could feel and see what I was doing wrong. Grip pressure was too tight, too loose, anticipating recoil, etc. I calm down, get back to fundamentals, and bang, the holes are appearing where they're supposed to.
More importantly, that Glock which I so derided before? I'd actually consider adding it to the collection now. What changed? Experience. Practice.
So, I said that 'fit' means very little. Where does it matter? When you're working at a level most of us simply aspire to. Until you've reached a level of proficiency at something, I belive 'fit' is a convenient excuse.
Thoughts?




















































