Get some control...

Scott35867

New member
EE Expired
Rating - 100%
1   0   0
I'm new the the pistol world, bought a G22 and Berr. 92.
The Glock...ALL Over the place. Much better with the 92.
Other than Practice, what should I be doing to group smaller?

Thanks for any advice....


Scott
 
Get some practice on the glock trigger as they said by dry firing. Also you should try to feel when the trigger resets while shooting on the range and only release the trigger to that point. This should sort out alot of the wandering shots because the Glock trigger is much different than the 92's.
 
While a lot of people say you can dry fire modern center fire semiautos I still like to have something to absorb the energy. I work in the electronics industry. The tubes that hold chips have rubber stoppers to prevent the chips from falling out. A medium hardness rubber.

I take these and cut them to fit the slot in the slide (for the hammer). Takes up some of the energy and also dulls the ringing/vibration, a little less distracting.

Dry firing is a very good practice. Another thing you may want to try is to load your magazines with some dummy rounds mixed with live rounds (at the range). Best to have a number of mags with random patterns. Or have someone else load the mag. Then shoot the gun. When you have a dummy round your gun will not go off. If you have a flinch, or pull the gun off target,then you will see it. Dry firing is good practice but you know the gun is not going to go off. You may react differently when you have live ammo in the mix.

Make sure your dummy rounds are clearly identified as such. I have plastic shaped cartridges and empty cases with bullets reloaded without powder. The cases have holes drilled through them to indicate they are dummy. You do not want any dummy round to look like a live round. If this were the case you could think a live round was a dummy. Real bad if you are not pointing in a safe direction and it does go off when you thought it wouldn't.
 
Make sure you are not gripping the gun with your strong hand too tight. I had that problem with my Glocks when I switched from my Beretta. The lighter gun requires proper grip practices. Remember approx 60% of your grip should come from your support hand.
 
4string said:
Make sure you are not gripping the gun with your strong hand too tight. I had that problem with my Glocks when I switched from my Beretta. The lighter gun requires proper grip practices. Remember approx 60% of your grip should come from your support hand.

And where does the other 40% come from?:confused:

Oh! :redface: , two hands. :p

Actually shooting two hands takes some practice. If you are inconsistant with your grip you will not be able to shoot as well as you should. I shot one handed for years. Then I tried two hands. Didn't shoot any better than one handed. :mad: Have to learn all over again.
 
Back
Top Bottom