Just a disambiguation - by "new shooters" I mean someone who's has zero experience shooting a handgun, such as first time shooters who have never fired a gun in their life.
The point I was trying to make was that "new shooters" limp wrist more often than non-"new shooters". Once you've gained some experience shooting, you're no longer a "new shooter" and eventually learn how not to limp wrist (or do it less often).
We all know limp-wristing makes you're shots go wild, and for us, in the pursuit of improving our accuracy train ourselves not to do it (regardless of the gun you shoot). What we don't normally consider is the fact that limp wristing also introduces a vibration into the gun it wasn't designed for. ANyone who has every worked with any kind of machinery knows that unintended vibrations causes stress on it's components, eventually to the point that they fail.
Take a machine, a gun, and introduce constant, unintended vibrations such as those caused by constant limp wristing, it introduces stress to it's components and sooner (rather than later) those components fail. Don't introduce those vibrations, the components are under less stress and don't fail (or last a lot longer).
I'm willing to bet that public ranges that primarily have first time shooters as their clientele have the problem with crack frames on their handguns quite often because their guns are constantly under the stress of limpwristing that stresses their components in a way guns owned by private owners aren't.
Please don't let this thread degenerate into a police/military training bashing thread.
That's an interesting thought...I mean, I'm not convinced that chronic limp wristing will prematurely wear our a firearm, or even wear it out faster than a firearm that hasn't been limp wristed, but it is an interesting thought.
