Urban_Warrior
Member
- Joined
- Sep 22, 2025
- Messages
- 20
I was gripping too tight and pulling shots, so Ioosened up a bit and my accuracy improved. I guess it's the small things. What fundamental thing did you fix that helped your shooting?
Practice ! I got my first revolver at age 16, and I’m now 79 in about a month. I went from miserable to pretty damn good in a couple years, after burning all the .22 LR I could afford.I was gripping too tight and pulling shots, so Ioosened up a bit and my accuracy improved. I guess it's the small things. What fundamental thing did you fix that helped your shooting?
Grip pressure (or "Inconsistent Grip Pressures") are pretty common in throwing our shots. Especially if you notice shot groups making a big deviation between magazine changes, or other changes in your Grip (ie, typically shooting low/left on first magazine, then suddenly grouping to the 3 o'clock as you attempt to 'tighten up').I was gripping too tight and pulling shots, so Ioosened up a bit and my accuracy improved. I guess it's the small things. What fundamental thing did you fix that helped your shooting?
Spot on!Above all, consistency is the key. I wouldn’t grip a handgun differently for target shooting if I were ever thinking about needing one for self defense. It just makes sense to me to use the same grip for both targets and self defense. In a self defense situation you will revert to your training…or should. If you train two ways, which one will you revert to when it goes to hell in a hand basket ?
I agree with the parts of your post about the need for both dry- & live-fire, & that grip pressure inconsistencies result in an inconsistent point of impact.The Military and Police teach how to fight with a pistol. They need to grip it hard enough that you won't lose control of your pistol while fighting. This requires serious grip pressure and well muscled forearms. They shoot targets with a very hard grip but this is not for the most accurate target shooting, it is training for surviving a fight. Training for self defense is the same. Habitually grip your pistol hard enough that no one can take it away from you or knock it out of your hand because death quickly follows losing control of your weapon.
Target shooting is very different and requires the utmost in consistency in your grip. A pistol recoils differently with different grip positions and different grip pressure and that causes it to shoot to different points of aim. We only need to grip hard enough to prevent movement of the pistol in your hand. Live fire is required to learn how hard you must grip a pistol for target shooting.
For both deadly serious and precision target shooting dry fire is needed to work out how to place the pistol in your hand and how to put your finger on the trigger. The priority for training with dry fire is to pull the trigger without disturbing the sights while gripping with the same pressure needed for live fire.