Buy or make a practice magazine that cannot be loaded with ammo.
So that's what those California/New York/etc. mags are for! Pretty smart!
Buy or make a practice magazine that cannot be loaded with ammo.
Dry fire will get you killed on the streetz.
Live fire only, because you don't want to build muscle memory of firing without recoil. That will make your double-taps super slow.
Dry fire will get you killed on the streetz.
Live fire only, because you don't want to build muscle memory of firing without recoil. That will make your double-taps super slow.
"Well respected trainers say that competition shooitng is bad becasue it teaches them to shoot powder puff ammo.." Almost every match I ever have shot uses USPSA rules where you either shoot Major or Minor Power. Very few competetitors shoot "powder puff" Minor power level ammo (usually only the 9mm double stack kids). Dry firing is only used to allow you to watch the front sight closely so you can see if you are moving the gun when you press the trigger. It has nothing to do with learning how to shoot double taps or control recoil. That is about the goofiest thing I've heard in a while.
Using USPSA rules will get you killed on the critical dynamic two-way range
I think Riley has one of those critically dynamic two-way ranges. They usually hold their outlaw "Targets Shoot Back" match in late November. It's sponsored by SNS Casting and QuikClot. Stay tuned to the Tactics and Training forum for details.
What kind of gun should I get if I want to DRYFIRE? I'm not sure on the low bore axis, what guns meet that criteria? Springfield? Glock? Smith? Something else?
I dont want to train to lose,.......I want my double taps accurate.
What gun?
That's operator. Boom.
good training practice for the "click", in keeping with Hicks law. Keep that muscle memory sharp!
This is not an issue with any quality, modern, center-fire pistol (anything someone's likely to dry-fire practice with).