Reddit Reddit reviews Dry-Fire Training: For the Practical Pistol Shooter

We found 7 Reddit comments about Dry-Fire Training: For the Practical Pistol Shooter. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

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Dry-Fire Training: For the Practical Pistol Shooter
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7 Reddit comments about Dry-Fire Training: For the Practical Pistol Shooter:

u/pdb1975 · 14 pointsr/guns

Quality of practice is more important than quantity. If you're just making holes and noise for 150 rounds, then that's all you're going to get. Practicing specific drills against a shot timer, augmented with a structured dryfire routine, and logging your progress, will show dividends fast.

https://www.amazon.com/Dry-Fire-Training-Practical-Pistol-Shooter/dp/1497319633/

u/qweltor · 5 pointsr/CCW

> I'm curious to know if they are worth the money.

They work. As does Refinement and Repetition, the Ben Stoeger book, the SIRT pistol, and many other products.

The critical part isn't the fancy book/tool/gizmo that gets you do to the regular practice of 15-minutes per day, 5-6 days per week. The critical part is doing the 15-minutes-per-day of dry practice.

Two-handed frontal targets. Draw and fire. Turn, draw and fire. Step and fire. Left-hand only. Seated (including seatbelt) draw. Etc. Etc. 15-minutes per day.

u/Shiner_Black · 2 pointsr/CCW

And dry fire. This book has a lot of great drills and general pistol shooting advice.

u/n0mad187 · 2 pointsr/CompetitionShooting

Upgrades never hurt. I just have seen so many people get equipment tunnel vision so I harp on it. Sounds like you have your priorties straight. If you have extra cash buy this
https://www.amazon.com/Dry-Fire-Training-Practical-Pistol-Shooter/dp/1497319633/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1524539065&sr=8-2&keywords=ben+stoeger+dry+fire

It's cheap, and if you stick with it you will improve.

u/Swordsmanus · 2 pointsr/dgu

I've done conceal carry for almost 10 years and tried a lot of different things. Here are my recommendations:

Get yourself a Shield or Glock 43. They're both solid stock pistols and the overall most versatile concealed carry pistols in terms of holsters, accessories, and trigger/sight upgrades. Get a good pocket or IWB holster for it. If you want to carry IWB, get a proper gun belt. I do both and now lean toward pocket carry, as it's the most comfortable and most versatile for any given wardrobe. You will simply carry more days of your life if you have a pocket setup available.

Once you get a holster, practice the draw without any ammo every day until you accumulate 300-500 repetitions. Start slow to get your form down. Use videos from top competitive shooters on draw stroke technique [1], [2] to get an idea of the fundamentals. Also see Ben Stoeger's Dry Fire Training and Practical Pistol: Reloaded for more on core shooting skill. Check out the entire Tactical Preschool series for a primer on tactics and mindset.

Whenever you get budget for it, get some training. You'll want to look for someone with a Master or Grand Master classification in USPSA for core shooting skill and a former SWAT or military instructor for tactics and mindset. If you can find someone with both, great, but it's fine to go to different, specialized trainers.

u/Stubb · 1 pointr/CompetitionShooting

Buy, read, and apply Skills & Drills and Dry-Fire Training.