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#1 |
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User
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Orygun
Posts: 4,243
Thanks: 118
Thanked 245 Times in 150 Posts
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"What he told me was to focus on the front sight blade, nothing else."
Terry, He's correct. A good sight picture is blurred rear sight , blurred target , clear front sight. This is why "peep" sights are more accurate than "open" sights once you learn to use them. Your eye can only focus on one plane or distance at a time. Once the sights are lined up, your eye will naturally center the rear sight. When you try to focus on all 3 planes at the same time, all 3 will be blurred and will tend to wander.
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I Still Need DWM side plate #49... if anyone runs across a nice one. What ~Rudyard Kipling~ said... |
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#2 | |
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User
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Near NYC
Posts: 428
Thanks: 30
Thanked 64 Times in 37 Posts
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Quote:
http://www.americanrifleman.org/arti...ooting-stance/ In my experience, shots hitting low left are primarily the result of anticipating recoil. I guess you can say shooters jerk the trigger when they anticipate. Randomly mix live rounds with dummy rounds in a magazine. Some go boom, some go click. You can watch people (righties) push their pistol down and to the left as they anticipate recoil, but only get he click. It's a good exercise. You have mastered it when the gun goes click and the pistol remains dead still. Now you are focusing, pressing the trigger, and following through. Here's a picture I lifted off the internet and cannot credit the source. It's a good representation of focusing on the front sight:
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