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I will be qualifying for a firearms tomorrow and I have 39 out of 60 rounds which is failing.
I understand you must first have a good stand, good grip of the gun, pull the trigger gently etc.
What I don’t understand is the front and rear sights. I know you must match the target first with the front sight, by going up and down. Then you want to center the front sight in the rear sight *** U***
EQUALLY, CENTERLLY, AND LEVELLY. TO MOVE THE REAR SIGHT, YOU GO LEFT AND RIGHT.
ONCE YOU GET ALL MATCHES UP, YOU FIRE.

This is right?

2007-08-08 12:54:08 · 15 answers · asked by Anonymous in Sports Outdoor Recreation Hunting

15 answers

Sounds like you have the principle correct but that's no good without enough practice to make it 'second nature' without thinking and enough practice to shoot better than 39/60.

Good luck!

2007-08-08 13:27:49 · answer #1 · answered by DJ 7 · 0 0

The two most important things for accurate shooting are (1) proper sight picture, and (2) proper trigger control.

Try focusing on the front sight of the gun. Make sure that you can see it clearly. In the background you should be able to see your target, although it will not be in focus. Don't worry about a sharp target picture. Look through your rear sight and focus on the front sight. If it's clear, and it covers the target, you're most likely going to hit it.

Trigger control is also important. Try unloading the gun, and go to a room with NO ammunition in it. Then practice getting a good sight picture. Aim at something (in a safe direction), and practice pulling the trigger. As you pull the trigger, try to keep the front sight covering a fixed point--don't let it move.

Once you've got both these skills honed, you're ready to go to the range and try with live ammo.

If, at the beginning of every shot, you follow the first two steps, you're going to do fine. Yes, there's going to be some recoil. Yes, you might have to overcome a bit of flinching. All this means is that you're not going to be able to make fast follow-up shots. After each round, start the process over again: Sight picture, then shoot. Sight picture, then shoot.

Good luck qualifying.

2007-08-08 15:17:56 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Your front and rear sight should be level with eachother and your front sight should be on the black or X ring of the target. Slow pull of the trigger and follow through after each shot.

My personal feeling though is that if you do fail, you should continue practicing. You obviously are not qualified to shoot in a low stress situation, no matter a high stress situation where people's lives are at risk.

Now that you know your weakness in your career, practice at it before you become a liability. I've taken ADA's who can't hit the broad side of a barn and have turned them into X ring shooters.

2007-08-08 13:28:20 · answer #3 · answered by LawGunGuy 3 · 1 0

having a firm grip also helps, but not too firm or else to be off to the right or left depending on which hand you shoot with. Some guns are made so you put the front sight exactly where you want to shoot, others have it so you aim just below where you want to hit. Practice a lot and get to know your firearm. Make sure the gun is clean. There is a SLIM chance it may be the gun, but highly unlikely.

2007-08-08 13:51:07 · answer #4 · answered by Matt 4 · 0 0

You seem to understand the basics of sight alignment, learn breath control as Roger outlined it, and then do lots of dry-fire practice. Your goal should be the smoothest trigger squeeze with the least amount of sight movement.

One very important thing about dry-fire practice. When you finish, put the gun away! Do not reload it and stick it in your belt holster. Doing so can lead to a negligent discharge situation know as the "Just-One-More-Time Syndrome." Don't ask me how I know.

Doc

2007-08-08 19:08:03 · answer #5 · answered by Doc Hudson 7 · 0 0

Focus on your front sight. Line the whole front sight blade against your target center-mass. The rear sight outlines your front sight blade. Then squeeze the trigger.

Good luck.

H

2007-08-08 16:12:41 · answer #6 · answered by H 7 · 0 0

That is correct*... If you want to become more accurate just remember to breathe, relax, aim, squeeze, fire*... When the gun goes off it should be a complete surprise to you each and every time you squeeze the trigger*... If it isn't a surprise then you are jerking the trigger instead of squeezing it, which is a NO, NO*...Or you are FLINCHING which will affect your accuracy also*....Hope this has helped you*....

2007-08-08 13:57:21 · answer #7 · answered by dca2003311@yahoo.com 7 · 0 0

sounds to me that you are jerking when you squeeze off the round. try putting just the tip of your finger on the trigger and gently squeezing it. first take a deep breath, and squeeze off the round as you gently exhale this will calm you a bit.sounds like you have the sights figureed out already. hope this is of some help, and good luck.

2007-08-08 16:10:47 · answer #8 · answered by Rogers R 4 · 0 0

while sighting in a rifle (or handgun), you many times circulate the rear sight interior the direction you desire the factor of impact to bypass. So if the gun shoots to the the terrific option and you desire the factor of impact to bypass to the left, circulate the rear sight to the left. in case you desire the factor of impact to bypass upward, decrease the rear sight. and so on. Now, it relatively is attainable to bypass the front sight. circulation of the front sight is opposite that of the rear sight. in case you desire the factor of impact to bypass to the left, circulate the front sight to the the terrific option. in case you desire the factor of impact to bypass upward, decrease the front sight. How do you regulate the placement of the front sight in spite of if it relatively is screwed in and clearly no longer transportable? straight forward, use a report. we are no longer conversing approximately gross circulation here, purely very diffused strikes. inspite of the shown fact that, if your rear attractions might nicely be moved, circulate them and don't touch the front. i might recommend taking your brass hammer or a sprint bit brass rod, and your gun to the rifle selection. hearth a three shot team, protecting very carefully. If it shoots to the the terrific option, then take an relatively delicate hit to the rear sight knocking it to the left. delicate. Then shoot yet another 3 shot team. word the middle of the gang and notice how plenty it moved as a effect of the tapping. Repeat as mandatory to bypass your shot team to the place you desire it to be. by the form,for the .357 magnum you will possibly attempt taking photos your communities at 50 or seventy 5 yards quite than one hundred yards. surely, you will possibly even attempt at 25 yards. have relaxing.

2016-11-11 19:27:58 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

seems you understand how to use the sites. now have adjusted them?? if so maybe you should simply practice more. also try pointing the gun as you would your finger and quit worrying about the sites. men always try to aim, women just point and shoot. women will hit you every time. think about it.

2007-08-08 19:20:24 · answer #10 · answered by bghoundawg 4 · 0 0

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