When shooting handguns I seem to shoot more accurately and faster focusing on the target instead of the front sight like everyone says. Am I just doing it wrong?
When shooting handguns I seem to shoot more accurately and faster focusing on the target instead of the front sight like everyone says. Am I just doing it wrong?
> Am I doing it wrong?
No. It's also extremely situational, depending on a balance of time vs accuracy requirements. Use target focus until such time as the precision required demands FSP focus instead.
Start with a red dot and regress later.
Is that a fricking p2? Are you why I could not find one?
If you're hitting the target, who the frick cares. It's literally impossible for anyone else to know where your eyes are focused.
We have this same debate in the automotive community about the correct way to "heel-toe" downshift. The only thing that matters is results. There is no correct way to do it.
Shooting is supposed to be muscle memory out to 15 yards, the sights are for ranges beyond
>automotive tangent
Paul Harrell, is that you
>Shooting is supposed to be muscle memory out to 15 yards
So you're telling me you could point-and-shoot a good mozambique drill at 15 yards without aiming properly? I'd have to see it to believe it.
Why be coy instead of crowning your target with lead immediately?
you must just not have the common sense to develope a skill by mising a hundred or so shots.
Front sight focus is generally what's recommended until you really get good. Once you have the muscle memory established on the draw and presentation of the gun, target focus is the way to go. That's the idea behind pistol red dots, but also competition pistols that have a blacked out rear sight and a bright front sight.
For target shooting, in anything stressful you'll be target focused.
Here is one I made that is better because it demonstrates what you should be seeing with both eyes open
I find that I can focus on the target and keep the front sight from blurring out so I never understand what these infographics are trying to say or what other people are talking about when they speak on this subject
Thats like me with eye dominance
I can easily switch which eye I am focussing with and can easily shoot left handed left eyed as well as right handed with my right eye
I think a lot of that stuff is in peoples heads.
In boyscouts I had an archery teacher guy tell me that I am left eye dominant based off a stupid finger in front of the face test but now that I do that same test I can get both a left eye dominance and right eye dominance conclusion from it.
The only time I get any "blur" is when I force myself to intentionally focus on the rear of the slide and it slightly washes out the target. It must be in these people's heads or they're moronic and trying to focus in the same plane with both eyes or something.
Eyes are kindof like a muscle tho and can be worked out and maybe some people just have weaker eye muscles which gives them less control over what they are actually doing with their eyes.
Astigmatism doesn't matter at all
You can still shoot just fine even if your red dot looks like a comet because it will always look the same. Just zero your red dot in the same place always and aim with the same part of the comet. Hell you could even zero off the tail of the comet and still be accurate because it will always look the same.
ok thanks, I find holographics work a bit better for me, I got used to it on my eotech 512
I have heard that prism optics don't have any blur for people with astigmatism but unless you are going with a magnified one they aren't worth it IMO because of the eye relief
Does anyone here use shooting glasses?
I'm definitely right eye dominant but I can switch things around if I try. It's definitely in your head since eye dominance is a brain thing, isn't it?
Only tangentially related but I can also relax my eyes consciously. I don't need to look away from my computer screen to avoid strain, I just blur my vision when nothing important is happening.
I've saved this. Thank you.
>It's definitely in your head since eye dominance is a brain thing, isn't it?
Literally speaking it is in your head, since your eyes and optic nerves are in your head. But no, it's not just a brain thing. You can have one eye be imperceptibly weaker than the other, or have a thinner optic nerve. This results in the brain getting a clearer signal from one eye and preferring it. Nothing can be done about that besides making the strong eye disadvantaged, such as by squinting. This gives your bad eye the better signal and makes the brain switch to it.
Does lasik fix astimgatism with regards to holographic and red dot sights?
Isn't astigmatism caused by a deformity of the eye? Don't think laser surgery can fix that.
Would be cool if it did though, since I have it on both eyes and I can only see clear out of one of them.
I use red dots and exclusively target focus regardless of distance. Same with rifle red dots.
With red dots you are supposed to target focus