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Thread: Muzzle alignment versus traditional iron sight alignment

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    Muzzle alignment versus traditional iron sight alignment

    This piggybacks off the SWYNTS.

    Traditional iron shooting requires meticulous head and eye alignment with the sights.

    Dot shooting if parallax free allows more freedom in head position and use of peripheral vision and still keep muzzle on target.

    This is something that @HCM has noticed with training shooters that dots excel in moving targets and movements. Likely due to additional freedom of alignment while still keeping muzzle on target.

    When I shoot, I’m keenly aware of my muzzle index independent of my sight picture.

    That’s why a press out rather than a casting draw. That’s why I train index independent of visual correction.

    That’s why I notice a distinct difference when I change to a different gun with a different NPOA like a 1911 or Glock (and why I modified mine to match CZ / Sig angle).

    In traditional teaching based off irons, I feel like iron sight alignment has usurped muzzle alignment… but iron sight alignment introduces additional constraints that muzzle alignment does not.

    That is, you can have muzzle alignment without sight alignment.

    Index is the basis of uncorrected vision shooting, but doesn’t get the attention and specific training that it deserves IMO.

    This is the greatest source of plateau of efficiency and marksmanship in a dynamic setting (also IMO).

    This came about in helping people make time at the 3 yard SWYNTS (0.8 draw, 0.2 split).



    And a demonstration of base mechanics that vision and visual correction / refinement builds on.


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    Member Sal Picante's Avatar
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    Needs more jFrame.


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    TLG was a fan of the press-out, but not a fan of MRDS.

    Sitting and tossing popcorn down my opinion hole....

    pat

  4. #4
    @JCN
    What blue gun are you using in the video?

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    Site Supporter CCT125US's Avatar
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    Cut from elsewhere back in 2019

    Accuracy notes for right eye dominant shooter.

    Holding the gun in place, as if locked in a vice:

    As the head PIVOTS right, the sight picture appears to move left, causing the shooter to compensate by bringing the gun to the right.

    As the head TILTS right, the sight picture appears to move up and to the left, causing the shooter to compensate by bringing the gun down and to the right.

    The gun has not moved off target, the shooter's perception has. The eyes need to get behind the sights, or the gun must be moved and stopped, or the shooter learns to disregard a certain amount of wobble.

    3 areas of concern under the shooter's control:
    Perception of the sights
    Gun wobble
    Head wobble
    Participation does not equal Proficiency
    - Mike Pannone

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    Here I was thinking all these years that the sights were used to align the muzzle with the eye and target.

    Could someone define the difference between the two?

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    Quote Originally Posted by Redhat View Post
    Here I was thinking all these years that the sights were used to align the muzzle with the eye and target.

    Could someone define the difference between the two?
    Nope, the sights are there to confirm and refine that the muzzle is on target... IF THE CONFIRMATION AND REFINEMENT IS NECESSARY.

    So like for example, in the eyes closed video.

    I'm not using my eyes or the sights to align the muzzle with the target.

    I'm using my proprioception and index to align the muzzle and if the target was harder or smaller, then I would use my eyes to fine tune the alignment.



    Quote Originally Posted by CCT125US View Post
    Cut from elsewhere back in 2019

    Accuracy notes for right eye dominant shooter.

    Holding the gun in place, as if locked in a vice:

    As the head PIVOTS right, the sight picture appears to move left, causing the shooter to compensate by bringing the gun to the right.

    As the head TILTS right, the sight picture appears to move up and to the left, causing the shooter to compensate by bringing the gun down and to the right.

    The gun has not moved off target, the shooter's perception has. The eyes need to get behind the sights, or the gun must be moved and stopped, or the shooter learns to disregard a certain amount of wobble.

    3 areas of concern under the shooter's control:
    Perception of the sights
    Gun wobble
    Head wobble
    Note that is an IRON SHOOTER convention and you can you can pivot head with a dot gun and still have the dot on target. It just moves in the window but still totally usable.

    What if you had blood in eyes or a head / neck injury in a fight and couldn't get the dominant eye behind the irons. Or if you couldn't move the head to align...

    If you don't have a good index, you'll literally be shooting blind.

    It's slow and unnecessarily constrained.

    Quote Originally Posted by Phred View Post
    @JCN
    What blue gun are you using in the video?
    It's a LaserLyte. I sold my SIRT to BBI.

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    Think about other kinetic sports

    In golf, do you look at your golf club when you swing?

    In baseball, do you look at your bat?

    In tennis, do you look at your racquet?

    I'm not an expert in those sports...

    But I'm assuming no. In golf where there is a high level of precision, you look at the target (which is the ball after you set up your alignment).

    In baseball and tennis which are more dynamic, I assume you don't look at your bat or racquet... but track the travel of the ball plus dart eyes to where you want it to go.



    Do you look at your gun in the holster as you get a firing grip? Or do you count on your hands to tell you the information?

    Same thing with index. It just gets more and more refined if you work on it.

    And doesn't if you don't.





    Here's a physiology example.

    As people age, their proprioception diminishes. But they often don't notice because they compensate with vision.

    But what happens if it's dark, they close their eyes or otherwise lose visual input.


    The answer is akin to field sobriety testing. You wouldn't know they're impaired without removing the vision, but it absolutely reduces their ability to react and coordinate.



    It seems to me that if you were gunfighting (as a non-gunfighter), you wouldn't want to neglect the proprioceptive training. Because eyeballs are squishy.



    And proprioception / index is actually the core of efficient gun mechanics, not vision.



    Here were some blind reloads I did a few years back as a demonstration.



    You can see my core proprioception wobble (also seen in my closed eyes draw video). It's not a very refined system, so I prefer to use my eyes to micro adjust and speed up while improving accuracy.

    But people who primarily use vision without developing proprioception will always be slow and inefficient because they're requiring external cues and feedback loops to get where they need to go.


    This is an example of someone who lost his proprioception:



    He has to look where his body is. Most firearms shooters are like that. They don't know where the muzzle is pointed unless they look.


    I would wager a good part of the "automaticity" that @John Hearne lists in his chart of the spectrum of shooter skill can be broken down into creating proprioceptive extension of the muzzle to your hand (the index).

    But most people and instructors don't specifically train that way.



    It'd be like if a baseball instructor insisted you keep looking at your bat instead of working to gain core index off proprioception independent of vision. Sure, some people gain this incidentally with a high volume of contact. But not as rapidly as people who train specifically for this.

    This is where competition shooting comes into play. The core of higher level competition shooting is the proprioception skill. It's clearly apparent in watching match videos who relies on visual feedback to get in the ballpark (slow and lots of macro corrections based off vision) versus someone with a good core index.
    Last edited by JCN; 05-21-2023 at 07:12 AM.

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by JCN View Post
    In golf, do you look at your golf club when you swing?

    In baseball, do you look at your bat?

    In tennis, do you look at your racquet?

    I'm not an expert in those sports...

    But I'm assuming no. In golf where there is a high level of precision, you look at the target (which is the ball after you set up your alignment).

    In baseball and tennis which are more dynamic, I assume you don't look at your bat or racquet... but track the travel of the ball plus dart eyes to where you want it to go.

    Do you look at your gun in the holster as you get a firing grip? Or do you count on your hands to tell you the information?

    Same thing with index. It just gets more and more refined if you work on it.

    And doesn't if you don't.
    Where Avery's S.A.F.E. Series (Sight Alignment by Feel Exercise) shines. Ron was a huge proponent of the concepts of proprioception/kinestic skills to increase target acquisition and hit probability.
    "There are two ways to do most anything- right and again."

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by mark7 View Post
    Where Avery's S.A.F.E. Series (Sight Alignment by Feel Exercise) shines. Ron was a huge proponent of the concepts of proprioception/kinestic skills to increase target acquisition and hit probability.
    That's great! What's old is new again! I suspect the Bakersfield designers purposely built this into their drill with the brisk pars at the short distances that didn't allow much correction.

    But it's been lost as evidenced by current legacy trainers struggling to make basic par times and decrying the sub-second draw as a parlor trick instead of an efficient kinesthetic baseline.

    Do you have a link to the SAFE series?

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