This looks pretty index driven to me
https://www.instagram.com/p/BsEAmxdn...on_share_sheet
Which to be fair I had to spend a lot of time in dry fire to build a repeatable index.
Last edited by jetfire; 12-31-2018 at 03:16 PM.
Index. I’ve also stopped focusing on the sights at all for anything short of bullseye shooting or small 1-2” dots and target focus everything else.
How well does an index draw work on uneven terrain or awkward positions, while moving, or when the target is moving?
As @GJM, @Gio, and others have said--a reliable index is fundamental. The goal is to be able to draw, pick up, or just move the gun, and have the sights aligned with the target. There's some confusion about the role that visual feedback plays. Can we rely on a "feedforward" presentation and break the shot without any visual feedback? Unless the target is fairly large, close, and stationary, the answer is probably not. There's a lot of feedback and adjustment required to line up and time the shot. What's interesting is how "what you need to see" to do that differs so much among people.
“There is no growth in the comfort zone.”--Jocko Willink
"You can never have too many knives." --Joe Ambercrombie
Index.
Schizo-cross-dominant. (Left-handed, but right-armed; decided to carry at 0300, in 1983. “Incomplete” left-eye-dominance.)
Sighting has always been a struggle.
Last edited by Rex G; 01-17-2019 at 04:05 AM.
Definitely index, but bio-mechanics refined and confirmed thorough lots of par time/precision work in live fire practice. Otherwise, you don't buy any time fishing for sights or dot at full extension. For most, index vs sight-driven ends up being a wash if you have to correct sight picture at extension for even .2 seconds during draws, reloads, or entering a position.