If you can't shoot a Glock well, you can't shoot well.
Let's say I've taken a bunch of fairly quick cars around a track. Nobody's ever trained me; I don't have the ability to score my times against other people except perhaps informally against other complete amateurs; I have also never used anything but automatic transmissions.
Now I buy myself a G37 with a manual transmission.
After a few trips to the track - and still no training - I post a thread on a car forum that's titled something like "Infinitis suck, I'm selling mine to someone who doesn't care about going fast."
If that forum has some serious drivers, amateur or pro, highly trained and experienced, and they find out I just can't drive stick, do you know what will happen?
Some people who don't know anything about performance driving will say "just be happy with your autos, autos are awesome I love mine lol".
People with experience and skill will tell me to learn to ####ing drive.
I could take the advice of people who don't know what they're talking about, or I could take the advice of experts.
Frankly I don't care which people prefer to do...I'm really only bothered by people who can't tell the difference between good and bad advice, who still feel they should be giving input. And people who take bad advice while telling themselves it's good advice, because it's easier than taking the good advice.
If you don't care about being a good driver, you don't need to learn stick.
Even if you are a good driver, you don't have to drive a standard car.
But if you can't drive stick, you're not really a great driver, so don't pretend you are.
Well said sir.
Let me elaborate on the trigger issue and their use by top competitors.
The top competitors are looking to put icing on their cake, perhaps an intricate design. You people can't even bake the cake let alone whip up some icing for said cake. Learn to bake the cake, then worry about the icing.
Tdc


















































