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<blockquote data-quote="grwd" data-source="post: 957750" data-attributes="member: 459"><p>to round out the tuesday morning peanut gallery, I will emphasize keeping a limited round count during live fire, like Kurt said.</p><p></p><p>-The best practices are the ones where emphasis and focus is placed on every single round sent downrange. Make each shot like it were your last.</p><p>If you can only keep your focus for 50 rounds, then leave after that 50 rounds.</p><p></p><p>-start and end with accuracy work; get the targets out to as far as you can get them, and shoot a slow, aimed group. DO the same at the end of the practice. If you end up tighter than you started, its a good thing. To start the next practice where you left off, is <em>even </em>better.</p><p></p><p>-Have a plan before you go to the range. Account for every round you plan on shooting. This will keep your costs down, and get you out of the bad habits of just loading mags and aiming at stuff and plinking away. Practice doesnt make perfect, <strong>perfect </strong>practice makes perfect.</p><p></p><p>-practice on the things you suck at, rather than the things youre good at.</p><p></p><p>Dink around for a few weeks on your own and then when you seem to hit a roadblock, call for professional help. TDSA is a great place to start, and there are other good schools.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="grwd, post: 957750, member: 459"] to round out the tuesday morning peanut gallery, I will emphasize keeping a limited round count during live fire, like Kurt said. -The best practices are the ones where emphasis and focus is placed on every single round sent downrange. Make each shot like it were your last. If you can only keep your focus for 50 rounds, then leave after that 50 rounds. -start and end with accuracy work; get the targets out to as far as you can get them, and shoot a slow, aimed group. DO the same at the end of the practice. If you end up tighter than you started, its a good thing. To start the next practice where you left off, is [I]even [/I]better. -Have a plan before you go to the range. Account for every round you plan on shooting. This will keep your costs down, and get you out of the bad habits of just loading mags and aiming at stuff and plinking away. Practice doesnt make perfect, [B]perfect [/B]practice makes perfect. -practice on the things you suck at, rather than the things youre good at. Dink around for a few weeks on your own and then when you seem to hit a roadblock, call for professional help. TDSA is a great place to start, and there are other good schools. [/QUOTE]
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