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Pistol shooting tips for a beginner

Posted on 9/22/11 at 5:46 pm
Posted by crispy
In your head
Member since Jan 2009
1108 posts
Posted on 9/22/11 at 5:46 pm
Looking for some help. Can you guys post some videos that would help out a beginner with a new pistol? Proper grip, stance, how to manipulate the sights, etc. Thanks in advance!

And if it helps, I own a Springfield XDm 9mm.
Posted by Choirboy
On your property
Member since Aug 2010
10778 posts
Posted on 9/22/11 at 5:55 pm to
I don't have any videos but a tip that was told to me years ago is to focus on the front site. While doing this let the rear site float into position and squeeze the trigger. This improved my shooting greatly.
Posted by QuietTiger
New Orleans
Member since Dec 2003
26256 posts
Posted on 9/22/11 at 6:01 pm to
Use rat shot, you'll hit whatever a lot more.
Welcome to the dark side by the way.
Posted by SCUBABlake
RIP WT6
Member since Jan 2008
40338 posts
Posted on 9/22/11 at 6:10 pm to
Search hickock45 on youtube. Guy has a bunch of great tips, pointers, and gun reviews.

eta: Link to the playlist. Covers stance, grip, trigger control, gun control, and accuracy.

LINK
This post was edited on 9/22/11 at 6:14 pm
Posted by Who Me
Ascension
Member since Aug 2011
7090 posts
Posted on 9/22/11 at 6:27 pm to
If you can you should find a friend or someone who is an experienced pistol shooter to go with you and instruct you directly.

But for a few tips to get you started here ya go. Your grip will be essential and sight alignment would probably be next. As the earlier poster suggested focus on the front sight to the point where the rear sight is out of focus.

Always. . Always safety should be a primary concern. I have seen some close calls due to ignorance on the firing line.

Good luck and report back on how your early shooting goes.
Posted by BM7133
Raceland, LA
Member since Feb 2006
1197 posts
Posted on 9/22/11 at 6:32 pm to
good thing at the 2:55 mark he racked the slide because he had no mag in but one in the chamber. as the round fell to the ground he gave it a WTF look, lol.
Posted by crispy
In your head
Member since Jan 2009
1108 posts
Posted on 9/22/11 at 6:37 pm to
Thanks for the help guys, keep it coming. I've only shot twice: once to decide which pistol to get, and once after buying the springfield. I remain extremely careful. I was taught how to completely field strip a Glock and Springfield xd before I ever loaded or shot one.
Posted by DrTyger
Covington
Member since Oct 2009
22325 posts
Posted on 9/22/11 at 6:43 pm to
Step 1: point
Step 2: shoot


It's a little more complicated than that, but the best tip I ever got was to find the method that you're most comfortable with.
Some people like isosceles stance others prefer the weaver. You may prefer to close one eye or leave both open. Just find which one you're most comfortable with and that will be the one that will let you hit what you're shooting at.
Posted by NimbleCat
Member since Jan 2007
8936 posts
Posted on 9/22/11 at 6:54 pm to
Make sure your off hand is not covering the slide when it racks back. Usually beginners grip the pistol and place their thumb over their wrist. Lock your off hand thumb over your dominant thumb to prevent this.

Also, Make sure you control your muzzle and don't point it at people when you are turning around and such. This happens with too many people to count, and is a bad habit to get into.

After a misfire, or a jam, stovepipe, failure to feed --clear the round and check the barrel for obstructions before firing again. It is a small chance of an obstruction, but it will be a catastrophic failure if there is debris in the barrel.

There are lots of names for stances: Modified Weaver, Weaver, isosceles, and modified isosceles can give you a great google head start.
Posted by DownshiftAndFloorIt
Here
Member since Jan 2011
71071 posts
Posted on 9/22/11 at 6:55 pm to
The secret is...





Shoot a whole bunch.
Posted by QuietTiger
New Orleans
Member since Dec 2003
26256 posts
Posted on 9/22/11 at 6:56 pm to
quote:

The secret is..

Bunch them in a hole.
Posted by wickowick
Head of Island
Member since Dec 2006
46277 posts
Posted on 9/22/11 at 6:57 pm to
This one will teach you a lot...

LINK
Posted by INFIDEL
The couch
Member since Aug 2006
16199 posts
Posted on 9/22/11 at 6:59 pm to
Buy a judge. You'll be shootin like chuck Norris right out the box. If chuck Norris needed a gun that is. And if chuck Norris needed a gun, chuck Norris would need a judge.
Posted by kengel2
Team Gun
Member since Mar 2004
33528 posts
Posted on 9/22/11 at 7:06 pm to
quote:

Looking for some help. Can you guys post some videos that would help out a beginner with a new pistol? Proper grip, stance, how to manipulate the sights, etc. Thanks in advance!


Check out this guy.

Haley Strategic
Posted by Falcon Punch
HCBAMF
Member since Sep 2011
420 posts
Posted on 9/22/11 at 8:10 pm to
Just google Bob Munden or Jerry Miculek you will learn a lot from them. They should have lots of videos.
Posted by Tigah in the ATL
Atlanta
Member since Feb 2005
27539 posts
Posted on 9/22/11 at 8:12 pm to
First rule: Both eyes open always. Know which eye is dominant & shoot that handed. There are tricks competition shooters can use with pinholes on glasses etc, but first & foremost keep both eyes open (this goes for all shooting).

The steps for shooting are:

1. Hold control - squeeze tightly, but not so much you shake. Keep thumb loose and not touching the gun. Lots of opinions on how to do a 2-handed grip. I prefer rotating my body to the dominant side & using a pulling force with a bent elbow on my non-shooting hand. Helps recoil I think. There are good points to be made for a simple isosceles triangle, straight in front, straight arms hold.

2. sight control - focus on the front sight, not on the target like with a rifle.

3. Breath control. stop your breath on the outbreath for slow fire. Stop breath wherever you are for timed fire, hold breath the whole time for rapid fire II'm talking competition terms here)

4. Trigger control. Smooth. Practice dry firing. A lot. Don't listen to the "dry firing is bad for your gun" people. A gun is not your arm not throwing a baseball.

5. follow-through. realign the sights on target after each shot

6. Enjoy the nice holes in your target.

ETA: Prompted by other responses:

Learn muzzle discipline - never point anywhere except downrange

Learn trigger discipline - keep your finger off the trigger until you're ready to shoot.
This post was edited on 9/22/11 at 8:16 pm
Posted by INFIDEL
The couch
Member since Aug 2006
16199 posts
Posted on 9/22/11 at 8:31 pm to
Both eyes open gives me hell. Just can't hardly do it, and if I could it would make worlds of difference in my shooting. Learning how to grip my pistol has made the most difference for me.

Down shift is pretty much right. Get to to range. I will add that it would be a good idea to take a pistol class. Learn proper technique and you won't have to break bad habits.
Posted by crispy
In your head
Member since Jan 2009
1108 posts
Posted on 9/22/11 at 8:34 pm to
Thanks guys
Posted by LSU_Lou
The Landmass between N.O & Mobile
Member since Jul 2005
2094 posts
Posted on 9/22/11 at 8:42 pm to
quote:

You may prefer to close one eye or leave both open. Just find which one you're most comfortable with and that will be the one that will let you hit what you're shooting at.


My advice, don't close both eyes. Leave at least one open.

But seriously, learn the technical stuff (stances, correct grip, etc) then forget it. In other words, make it as natural as possible-like and extension of your arm.
Posted by DownshiftAndFloorIt
Here
Member since Jan 2011
71071 posts
Posted on 9/22/11 at 9:27 pm to
quote:

Learning how to grip my pistol has made the most difference for me.


Same for me. My groups tightened up ALOT once I figured out that your left hand doesn't go under the butt of a plow-handled .357
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