Valuable Tip!!!

Yeah, Rob will point you in the right direction.

Only problem was I shot with him today at the Wentworth Level II! I went way too fast and blew all four stages. :( He showed pity on me and gave me some more tips after the match. :)

Lesson: never try to shoot as fast as a much better shooter. lmao
 
Shoot your sights, shoot your own game.
Also realize the speed a good Open shooter is running will be faster than an iron sighted production gun.
 
I get a kick out of watching guys crash after they watch someone rock a stage and think, "I can do that too". its like hearing a redneck say hey watch this
 
I slowed it down a bit at IPSC practice night this past Thursday and out of four stages only a couple Charlies, no misses or penalties and the rest Alphas.
 
Not on-line but available from Amazon.

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Can anyone recommend a good on-line primer/tips to read-up on proper dry fire technique?
Any drill you can do in live fire can be done dry. You can also set up little stages if you want, though personally I prefer measurable drills. A great deal of dry fire practice has NOTHING at all to do with the gun; it's more about movement. So you can work on everything that happens between the shots. The key is to focus on (correct) technique and work with a timer to nibble your par times down in small increments, without the distraction of recoil, blast and noise. And Steve Anderson's tome, noted below, is a great recourse.
 
While I agree with what Rob said, don't neglect the part if dry fire that does have to do with the gun. I've learned the hard way over the years that taking the time to work on sight picture, trigger press and follow through will pay huge dividends to your ability to navigate an IPSC course of fire.
 
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