Give this some thought. My younger Son visited weekend before last and showed me his 'new to him' Ruger SR22. I ran a magazine through it and got the sights fairly centered and then handed it back to him. Just a reminder: he has a serious visual impairment-as in can barely see his hand in front of his face. At 7 yards from the 8" steel plate, I took my spot slightly behind his shoulder and gave him directions to get on target. First 2 shots were close as I fine tuned his aim and then he hit 5 of the next 7 by simply holding where I told him. Next magazine he hit 5 of 9 with the misses really close. Then he pulled out his little Glock 9mm and we had similar results until he tried some 'double taps' and that wasn't quite on par.
This may be hard for some to believe but I started his training over 20 years ago with a soft air BB pistol and a target that beeped it's location and dinged when hit. He learned to orient and maintain his hold from shot to shot. Oh yeah, that part about me aiming the pistol by 'remote control' is also a learned skill.
This may be hard for some to believe but I started his training over 20 years ago with a soft air BB pistol and a target that beeped it's location and dinged when hit. He learned to orient and maintain his hold from shot to shot. Oh yeah, that part about me aiming the pistol by 'remote control' is also a learned skill.