They are nice. Goes really well with this.
https://lasrapp.com/
Admittedly, I havent used mine in way too long.
Why wouldn’t one just put on a carhart and go to the outdoor range all winter and shoot real ammo? It is not crowded.came a cross a SIRT pistol which from what I understand is supposed to aid in dry fire training and projects a light on a target when trigger is pulled. Any have any experience with them?
Why wouldn’t one just put on a carhart and go to the outdoor range all winter and shoot real ammo? It is not crowded.
Why wouldn’t one just put on a carhart and go to the outdoor range all winter and shoot real ammo? It is not crowded.
Because with this you don't have to.
diminished returns on time and money spent IMHO
how is working on fundamentals not yield a good return? All things considered it does not take much to go through $200 in ammo.
that’s the question to task yourself to. For the total commitment in dollars and time how long is your road to fast and accurate marksmanship? It’s a personal doctrine that is going to take more than 200 rounds no matter how many indoor toy guns you play with. Sorry. Cold hard facts. Dry firing, mag changes, presentations can all be done with the gun you may own, saving you time and money so you can hand load and/or buy more ammunition.
[STRIKE]So you are saying there is absolutely zero benefit to dry fire, or dry fire with electronic feedback like this and the only one true path to excellence is sending lead downrange?[/STRIKE]
Misread. So you are saying that there is absolutely zero benefit to a dry fire tool that will give you actual feedback on exactly what you are doing wrong so that you can correct it faster than sending lead downrange? Because things like LASR and MantisX do just that. "oh, look. When I pull the trigger I'm also pulling right."
[STRIKE]So you are saying there is absolutely zero benefit to dry fire, or dry fire with electronic feedback like this and the only one true path to excellence is sending lead downrange?[/STRIKE]
Misread. So you are saying that there is absolutely zero benefit to a dry fire tool that will give you actual feedback on exactly what you are doing wrong so that you can correct it faster than sending lead downrange? Because things like LASR and MantisX do just that. "oh, look. When I pull the trigger I'm also pulling right."
I have the LaserLyte training cartridges and love them. You can improve dry fire practice all day long while on conference calls, watching a movie or whatever.
For me personally, the cost of a surplus .40 is so close to the cost of a new SIRT, I'd rather have a real pistol to use for dry fire. I went a bit more $ and bought a retiree's gun so I could have the exact same model for training and dry fire but keep the wear and tear off my carry gun. If you're concerned about dry fire with a real gun, swap the barrel out for a yellow training barrel. I like the idea of the SIRT but until the trigger feels the same I don't think I'll invest in one.
I'd like something that allows repeated trigger pulls without having to manually cycle the slide each time. If someone made a device that did that to an actual Glock, I'd be down with it and it would give my 26 purpose beyond taking up space in the safe.