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Posted: Tue Mar 16, 2010 10:46 pm
by lastman
Another thing you get from dry firing is the lack of a distraction.

Many shooters take their focus off the sights and look at the card once the shot has broken. Dry firing stops that because there is nothing to look at.

The different feel you experience when the pistol fires live as opposed to dry firing is of no real consequence. The shot has already broken.

Posted: Tue Mar 16, 2010 11:06 pm
by pistol newbie
if you done all fundamental well maybe iris on your shooting glass will help.
after i attach iris on my shooting glass i can see f sight clearly. setting your trigger so you can touch it with finger and you can pull it straight back and don't move your f sight. For me trigger F sight is a F car window and trigger is my steering wheel grip is my chair.

Posted: Wed Mar 17, 2010 3:39 am
by RobStubbs
pistol newbie wrote:if you done all fundamental well maybe iris on your shooting glass will help.
after i attach iris on my shooting glass i can see f sight clearly. setting your trigger so you can touch it with finger and you can pull it straight back and don't move your f sight. For me trigger F sight is a F car window and trigger is my steering wheel grip is my chair.
Irises are generally considered a bad thing. A better solution to not being able to focus on the foresight is getting the correct lens. Irises work by increasing depth of field and hence rearsight, foresight and target are all in focus. That makes it very difficult for our brains to sort out the most important bits i.e. the foresight. Another side effect of irises is that they reduce the amount of light getting to the eye and they can therefore increase eye strain. The only positive use of an iris I can think of is when you keep the iris wide open and use it as a centering device, to ensure consistency of head position.



Rob.