Have you served in the military? Yes, I served in the Air Force and got out in Oct 1992, so I'm sure my time and your time are starkly different. Currently, I am with our training division with our local Sheriff's Reserves serving as one of their Glock Armorers and going through training to become a Range Safety Officer. Range time with military weapons isn't something you can count on. You can't just say "let me shoot more..." You can't buy your own ammo and shoot it through their guns just because the military is stingy. If I remember right, you could shoot the course of fire twice for qualification in the same day if needed (about 40rds each time), but if you didn't qualify you had one more day of range time usually a week later. There is no "practice" unless I wanted to go buy the same model gun and my own ammo and shoot elsewhere. Most of us did voluntarily shoot the basic pistol course (100% about marksmanship to qualify for a ribbon but nothing else) to put extra lead downrange. This is where those of us that regularly put most of our holes in the center realized the gun was different. The unfortunate thing was that the basic course was not required prior to the "practical" course unless it had been a few your qualifications were lapsed, but if you shot it and failed to qualify you were forbidden from shooting the practical course (for carrying on duty) Dry fire practice can only take you through form and function, not accuracy.
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The things you mention about practicing, working out deficiencies etc. never bothered me when we shifted from Colt's to Berettas. Because they are extremely similar handguns in terms of angle, grip, and balance. The course of fire for "practical" qualification (like a carry permit test) is pass fail, not graded on a curve. the 40 round course included everything, strong hand, weak hand, supported, unsupported, from barricade, and even from the hip at 3 yds. Aiming is only a factor in about 2/3 of the test, the rest is based on instinctual shooting and the gun shooting where you point it at with little time for proper stance and breath control... These were all from the holster and timed (i.e. 3rds 3 seconds, 6rds 12 seconds etc.)
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I never "blamed" Glock. Glock is like the Volvo of guns "we're boxy but we're reliable!". They may be 100% reliable, but I don't like them. With 17 different guns lined up for me to shoot I will perform better with almost any other manufacturers guns.