Trunk Monkey
member
no one other than me is qualified to tell me differently.
This is really a sore spot for you isn't it?
no one other than me is qualified to tell me differently.
Ruger SR9C (my personal favorite)
View attachment 879633
Ruger lcp
View attachment 879632 his & hers.
I will shoot at least 25rds per gun, per month.
My practice is informal, and I mix it up:
Double taps
Reloads
Point shooting
Speed drills
Dark with weapon lights or flashlights.
Precision from rest
Some think both are one in the same."Inexpensive" and "cheap" are not necessarily the same thing.
Enough of the squabbling.
I agree my friend.I don't insist on top dollar equipment. I do insist on top quality equipment.
View attachment 880778
Bianchi Accumold is reasonably priced and well built enough that I trusted it at work for years.
What is the difference between sight acquisition and trigger control between RF and CF?"What matters to you? How much do you budget to do what you do with your CCW piece to keep competent in your shooting skills?
How's it working out for you?"
First, I dry fire constantly. If I am watching TV, I am dry firing. If I am working from home, I'm practicing my draw to first shot.
Try the dry fire program from Claude Werner. I like it.
After that, look for directed 100 round practice sessions. Thunder Ranch has a 100 round session that covers all necessary skills. You should shoot at least 100 rounds a month to maintain skills. With semi-autos, you can use 22 Long Rifle for most of it, but you still need to practice with a centerfire gun.
22 LR practice does NOT count toward centerfire revolver shooting at all. I tried this for a year during the first Obama ammo draught where I couldn't get 38 or 357. I definitely lost proficiency with revolvers during that time.
None. Some disagree, but using a .22 similar to the CCW hand gun or a .22 unit on the gun can save you hours of instruction. It will help trigger control by reducing the "Flinch" reaction to the gun. A .22 handgun is a great starting point.What is the difference between sight acquisition and trigger control between RF and CF?
That's what I was thinking.None. Some disagree, but using a .22 similar to the CCW hand gun or a .22 unit on the gun can save you hours of instruction. It will help trigger control by reducing the "Flinch" reaction to the gun. A .22 handgun is a great starting point.