View attachment 267 This should help.
I have a hard time focusing on both the front and rear sights and the target itself. I can kinda get both sights in focus, but then the target looks like a double.
Wow. So many replies here. I'll check out some of the YouTube videos and now I have some items to go off of when doing searches.
My deal with the circle is that there'll be a few holes all over that circle. I'm not consistent.
You should spend some time dry-firing (making sure you have no ammunition in the room when you do it for safety). If you can borrow a gun with a laser, you should dry fire with that.
Another exercise is to put a pencil in your unloaded gun, touch it lightly to a piece of paper and pull the trigger using your usual shooting stance. Strive for a point on the paper as opposed to any lines. This gives you an idea if you are pulling the gun off target when you pull the trigger.
Another exercise is to support your unloaded gun with sandbags or whatever you can come up with. Without touching it, sight to a wall where you've taped a piece of paper. Have someone with a pencil mark the spot you are sighted on. Do that repeatedly. The goal is to have pencil marks nearly all together. This will give you an idea about your sight picture consistency.
I can dry fire with a 9mm round sitting on the top of the slide, just behind the rear sight and not have it fall off.
I'm not sure how this pencil deal works. Will the hammer launch the pencil out or something?
What part of "NO AMMO IN THE ROOM" did you not understand? :nono:When doing any "dry firing" exercise, be sure that you don't have ANY live ammo in the room. Secure the ammo in a locked container or another room if possible.
If your firearm requires it, you should use "snap caps" or some other type of inert "dummy" or "training" type ammo. We don't want to read about you becoming a statistic. :wink:
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