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The Range
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<blockquote data-quote="Norman" data-source="post: 2897434" data-attributes="member: 4232"><p>No offense, but that's about the worst advice you can give. </p><p>I've seen maybe 5 Glocks that shot left from the factory. I've seen a whole lot of people who shoot their Glocks to the left. </p><p></p><p>OP: It could be a few different things. Off the top of my head, trigger control. Many people want to use the gun like a camera. The sights are aligned so they want to take a picture, and end up slapping the trigger. It's a combo of not trusting your sightsite and anticipation of recoil. Take the slack out, focus on the front sight and smoothly press through the wall. There's a good chance you're also milking the grip. By that I mean you're tightening your fingers on your strong hand when you're manipulating the trigger. Dry fires should help.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Norman, post: 2897434, member: 4232"] No offense, but that's about the worst advice you can give. I've seen maybe 5 Glocks that shot left from the factory. I've seen a whole lot of people who shoot their Glocks to the left. OP: It could be a few different things. Off the top of my head, trigger control. Many people want to use the gun like a camera. The sights are aligned so they want to take a picture, and end up slapping the trigger. It's a combo of not trusting your sightsite and anticipation of recoil. Take the slack out, focus on the front sight and smoothly press through the wall. There's a good chance you're also milking the grip. By that I mean you're tightening your fingers on your strong hand when you're manipulating the trigger. Dry fires should help. [/QUOTE]
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