If you want to learn to shoot well and develop good habits starting with rimfire is an excellent idea. You will learn without any recoil related issues and the lack of recoil will expose any bad habits you may develop along the way. The low(ish) cost of .22LR is also conducive to lots of practising, which is what you need to develop skill.
Assuming you're like most of us, you're going to wind up with a few guns. A .22 may not be your first purchase, but you will likely, at some point, see the benefit of having at least one. Shooting a .22 isn't going to make you go all giggly, or make you grow hair on your knuckles, but they're still fun to shoot and still requires skill to shoot well. Also useful to have if you bring a new/inexperienced person or youngster to the range - despite being a relatively "lightweight" round, a 9 mm is still pretty snappy and can be a bit of a shock to someone who's never shot before.
A .22 may be boring after shooting a 9mm. But a 9mm is boring after shooting a 45ACP. See where I'm going with this?
I am taking my RPAL course at the end of november and have started looking at pistols. When I stated looking for NR rifles when I first got my PAL the resounding suggestion was buy a quality .22 to learn the fundamentals. Does this stand true with pistols aswell?
Im not sure where my end goal is yet, IDPA, IPSC, or just recreational target shooting, but it all has to start with a purchase of some sort.
Thanks
For those saying 9mm isn't that bad, I have seen an awful lot of really bad flinches among people who shoot the "dinky" 9mm.
I have only been shooting for a year now, everyone told me the same and still do tell me to buy a .22
I didn't listen my first gun I bought was a Glock 17 9mm pistol, one years later I own 5 Glock pistols (4-9mm and 1-.45) And 4 rifles (2-.223 1-7.62x39 and 1-.45)
I totally get the fact that .22 is cheap and easy to shoot, but it just does nothing for me personally besides the rapid fire with large capacity magazines. Id rather struggle with a larger caliber personally, but I dont think 9mm is that big anyways, so I dont see anyone having a problem starting with a 9mm like I did....I think you will end up shooting it longer, because as I move up into rifles and larger calibers I still find myself shooting just as much 9mm as when I started. And I think there is more to learn with a 9mm compared to a .22
So yeah being in your position a year ago, Id suggest a 9mm to start. If you can afford the ammo, if you cant afford 9mm Id just stop right now because that is the cheapest ammo I shoot lol
Just because you shoot 10,000 rounds of 22 before you pick up a centre fire does not mean you will not develop a flinch.
This is correct, but not the point. The point of starting with .22 is to learn fundamentals without having to worry about developing a flinch. I see lots of guys at the range that refuse to shoot .22 for whatever reason. It's boring or not loud enough or whatever. Lots of these guys flinch brutally because they never learned to shoot properly before moving up to bigger calibers.
I also don't understand the comments about a learning a tighter grip for bigger calibers. It isn't hard at all to hold onto a gun more tightly. About 2-3 rounds will remind you what recoil is and then you hang on properly. Recoil management is very easy compared to learning to pull the trigger without affecting your grip and the POI. Everything else pales in comparison to developing that trigger control. Having to fight a flinch while you work on trigger control just makes it harder.
Mark



























