shaky hands wrote:Learning fundamentals using a shitty trigger is a road to disappointment.
Seems the focus should be one the "shitty" trigger, not the "crappy" gun.
I got all kinds of contradictory advice when asking about what to purchase as a first gun. I was initially looking for an Olympic class pistol. And more than one member on here took to the fact that I was new and "unworthy" of such a gun and that there was no way to "buy points".
But then others, like your link, recommended getting the best gun I could afford.
I have to agree with Neil H. Unless it actually is Olympic class competition, anyone with any pistol should be encouraged to participate. Love the "best score counts" format competition too. Maker the experience as positive as possible for as many people as possible.
When someone asks about joining a competition ask what they have, or what they like and can afford. Encourage them to learn where limitations in their shooting lie. In their pistol or in their technique. Never say their pistol is "crappy". If they aren't shooting groups as good as their pistol can from a rest, there's improvements they can make by spending money and time on the range and not necessarily money upgrading their hardware.
If a shooter doesn't want to compete in competitions, encourage using competition targets and keep records of all targets shot. Then scores can be compared against others with a similar classification and against the shooter themselves to see if they are improving.