How much time do you spend to go through 300 shots?
definitely better dude. But seriously 5yds
hahaha, at first I thought you were talking to me dude and my post right before yours (cuz I stated 10yds for the pistol I saw tonight). hahahaha
Seriously, what is so hard to understand here?? Not that I'm a rockstar Slavex clone or anything but I start ALL my practice sessions with 50 rounds at 5m at 1" target patches and don't move on until I've got 5 rounds either in (preferred) or toucning (acceptable) the 1" square or the 50 rds are all done - it's been awhile since I've actually had to make it to 50 rds though.
I call it quits when I hit 200-250 or I start to see a degradation of time when shooting whatever drills I'm working on - newer shooters should probably strive for excellence with every shot and stop sooner. If you don't know what you're doing wrong and you're pounding 500 rds a session down-range you're just reinforcing bad habits. You don't know what you don't know (unconscious incompetence)...
You need to go to the range with a goal other than making noise and looking cool or you'll never get better at any really measurable rate.
- newer shooters should probably strive for excellence with every shot and stop sooner. If you don't know what you're doing wrong and you're pounding 500 rds a session down-range you're just reinforcing bad habits. You don't know what you don't know (unconscious incompetence)...
You need to go to the range with a goal other than making noise and looking cool or you'll never get better at any really measurable rate.
I don't know about the latest generation but the older glocks really need some griptape added to stop them from squirming around in my hand!
I can shoot a pistol quite well - slowly. My groups go to hell when I pick up the pace. .....
Well, we've argued about some fundamentals till we were blue in the face, so we might as well start arguing about techniques to deliver said fundamentals now... lol
If a gun is moving around in one's hands, the solution is squeeze more.
Squeeze as if you were crushing the grip front to back with your trigger hand, and side to side with your reaction hand.
I also roll my elbows towards each other slightly to take elbows bending out of the equation.
Once you start gripping pistols like this, you will:
1) stop calling your off hand, weak.
2) learn how to truly isolate your trigger finger to do nothing but press the bang switch straight to the rear.
3) start to watch your front sight barely rise up from the rear sight
4) shoot faster and more accurately than you ever thought possible, and start understanding how those pro's go bangpingbangpingbangpingbangping so damn quickly when shooting steel...
Can-down, I'm not saying you can't shoot, just using your comment as an example for new shooters to learn another tidbit of info.
Your not trying to say there is no advantage to grip tape or any type of grip that gives you a more secure grasp?
I didn't mention grip tape or any aftermarket grips in my post, and certainly never said "no advantage".
Now that you ask though, I feel their benefits pale in comparison to a strong squeeze.
My go to gun has no grip tape. It's a gen 4 g19 and covering that texture with anything but my skin would be foolish.



























