Absolutely, the trigger is the big difference, I just cant seem to get a consistent squeeze/pull.Do you think it may be the way the Glock trigger feels a little different than a DA/SA gun like your Beretta?
Absolutely, the trigger is the big difference, I just cant seem to get a consistent squeeze/pull.Do you think it may be the way the Glock trigger feels a little different than a DA/SA gun like your Beretta?
Do you think it may be the way the Glock trigger feels a little different than a DA/SA gun like your Beretta?
I bought a G17 2 months ago and I really want to love it but I cant be consistently accurate with it to save my life and its frustrating to no end. I've put new sights on it and dryfired it alot but to no avail thus far. Im waiting for the day it "clicks" and I shoot better with it but until then Ill use my Beretta for future run n guns.
Actually that's what I intend to do when I quit working out of town. A buddy recommended going to 2A.I have the same problem with my 17. I've found the death grip with my strong hand had to be relaxed and more pressure applied with my weak hand. It naturally tend to shoot Glocks to the left about 1" at 10-15 yards. That brought POI it back to POA for me. All the practicing and throwing money down range was a waste until I modified my grip. An hour of a good instructors time might be a good investment. It was for me. I couldn't understand how I could blow the center out of something with my P226 but struggled so much with a Glock.
Actually that's what I intend to do when I quit working out of town. A buddy recommended going to 2A.
I have the same problem with my 17. I've found the death grip with my strong hand had to be relaxed and more pressure applied with my weak hand. It naturally tend to shoot Glocks to the left about 1" at 10-15 yards. That brought POI it back to POA for me. All the practicing and throwing money down range was a waste until I modified my grip. An hour of a good instructors time might be a good investment. It was for me. I couldn't understand how I could blow the center out of something with my P226 but struggled so much with a Glock.
Anyone who thinks quality training is a bad idea or not worth the money and effort is only screwing themselves, and is probably a danger to those around them.If I may so humbly advise without some of the peanut gallery going nuts. I don't know what 2a offers currently, I do know those guys like Eric and Mike are top notch but I will say that a 2-3 day class from TDSA or the like (not sure whom is out at USSA anymore?) will do wonders on just about any platform. It's a significant investment for sure, but you carry that knowledge from there on out and it's invaluable IMO.
See Will Andrews at H&H for someone local and convenient.Do you have a recommendation for someone? A good instructor who can identify the issue and help out?
I realized that I am a Glock enthusiast.
Enter your email address to join: