I'm a really bad shot. New Pistol owner. Can anyone relate?

- And two other points to emphasize. I read elsewhere in this thread that you should be surprised when the pistol fires; well, that works a lot better with a rifle, where you can fix your sights dead-accurately on the X-ring and they'll stay there. It does not work on a pistol, because it's wobbling-around on the end of your arms and you only want it to go-off in the (rare) moment the sights are lined-up. You PULL the trigger on a pistol, you do it deliberately when you're happy with your sight picture. Therefore get a fairly pricy .22 with a 'better' trigger and a long barrel (i.e., a long sight picture) so you can clearly see your sights and clearly see when they're nicely lined-up, and shoot a lot of practise ammo. Get some snap-caps for your favourite centerfire pistol and practise your trigger squeeze with lots of dry fire. DO NOT dry fire a .22 without snap caps - .22 is rimfire, so you'll break the firing pin if you repeatedly slam it into the edge of the chamber without a round (or snap-cap) to cushion it. And remember, if you PULL the trigger and the shot goes-off to one side (usually the side away from your shooting hand), or downwards, you're pulling the gun as well as the trigger; do some more dry fire, and concentrate on the pistol not moving at all when you pull the trigger.

Another big trick when learning to shoot pistol is to remember at first, not to stress-out over where the bullets go. STRESS OUT over them all going the same place - in other words, try to shoot a smaller group, wherever it happens to be, because having a nice little cluster somewhere is so much more instructive of your technique than having them all over the target with one shot in the ten-ring. Line your sights up on the bullseye (if you're shooting a standard round target, try the 6-o'clock hold because then you can see your sights against the white of the paper, vice the black of the bullseye), and shoot - okay, it's up at two o'clock in the 5-ring, but so what? Try it again - line the sights up just like you did last time, and shoot again - if that bullet hits at two o'clock in the 5-ring, right next to the last bullet, you're DOING IT RIGHT. I sing the praises of adjustable sights; if you put all your shots in a 2" circle at two o'clock in the 5 ring, adjust the sight a little down and a lot left and you're home.
 
^PULL is probably not the best term to use. One should squeeze the trigger until let off. This should be somewhat of a surprize, because a novice shooter may anticipate the shot and flinch at the worst possible moment.
I dislike the term PULL here, as it's so darn easy to just PULL the trigger and end up yanking those shots wide, to the left or right.
And why should the moment of firing being any different from a handgun versus long gun???
In the cold light of day, it's still just marksmanship principals that apply equally to both shooting tools. Only we mere humans scr@w it up.

Cheers.......
 
Hey fellas,

I'm a new PAL holder and I own a glock 17.
I've had it for about two weeks and put maybe 200 rounds down range.
Here is the thing... I suck pretty bad and my shots are everywhere and mostly left.
I want to be good at this hobby so I'm sticking with it, but can you guys give me tips?

Also for those of you like me that are good now, can you tell me about your progression from crap shot to decent shot? It's seeming a little hopeless right now. Not easy at all. Is there a certain number of rounds it takes to get better?

Take a 2 hour class on fundamentals (sights, grip, trigger) with a pro. No one is born with skills shooting a pistol, don't believed all the bull excrement here. Pistol shooting is something you learn from an expert.

On a small light firearm i.e. A pistol, Any slight variation in sight picture, grip position and trigger break make a tremendous difference in where you group.

Think about angles, a slight variation on a 4 inch barrel as opposed to a slight variation on a 20 inch barrel. Huge frigging difference...
 
Proper two handed grip, left hand pulling back and right hand pushing forward...make sure pad of trigger finger pulling the trigger, not the fingertip or the middle of your finger. Practice dry firing at home and keeping things consistent...a session every evening...then go slow at the range and focus on your technique. Your speed will come with time.
 
Rifle shooting - 8 pound rifle, 4 pound trigger

Pistol shooting - 1 pound pistol, 4+ pound trigger

Big difference.

No doubt...but who has a trigger on their rifle that's more than 3 lbs. anymore? 2 to 2.5 lbs. is better...

If all else fails, then sell your Glock and get a CZ Shadow, or a 6" barreled revolver and shoot .38 special...
 
When you pull the trigger work on moving just your finger and not your whole hand , always use the front pad of your trigger finger to pull it , pull straight back . Dont be tense and dont flinch , mix up a dummy round in a mag and see how bad your flinch is when your expecting a bang.
 
I watched both videos posted by members in this thread, and they made a vast improvement. One focuses more on stance, and the other on grip.

Here's what my target normally looks like at 45' (Glock17C):

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And here we are after watching the vids @45' (with a few fliers):

43B96D82-59D4-4981-84C9-2030BF132366-1326-00000116BF8AEB0C_zps900b9796.jpg


And @20':

748B6A81-F9EE-4F76-8343-C86D6E249E41-1326-00000116B426FB73_zps3f39185e.jpg



Vast improvement... I've never had any formal instruction.
 
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I'm in Vic... PM me , I'll let you know what my training and experience is. I'd be happy to meet you at the VFG for a couple hours and run you through some basics.

Take this guy up on his offer and then seek out the Independent Shooters League on the island. Join us and you'll get used to your gun... or go broke feeding it ammo ;)
 
I haven't read all the replies and apologize if this has already been suggested: do you know WHICH of your eyes is your dominant eye? I'm right-handed and naturally kept my right eye open to aim. It wasn't until I did the dominant-eye 'test' and discovered that my dominant eye was my LEFT eye.

Point with your dominant hand (if your right-handed, it's your RIGHT :) ) far off in the distance. Close one eye, then open and close the other, while holding your point. The object you're pointing to will remain more 'in line' with your dominant eye.

If you find it's the OTHER eye that you've been using to aim with, try using the other eye! :D
 
All the great technics aside you need to know how to be a decent or great shooter. The one thing I found was as a new shooter I was holding the pistol way to tight. I was apprehensive of the firearm. Like it was gonna jump out of my hands. When I learned to relax. The fine detailed things of shooting good came it to play.
 
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