“Remember, being healthy is basically just dying as slowly as possible,” Ricky Gervais
And I think he’s still wrong.
My wife is a noob and she shoots better than a lot of PFrs. I started her on a dot.
Most students I start with no experience, I start with dots.
A number of “experienced” people I help at the range sucking it up with irons… suck because they practice wrong because they don’t understand what they’re seeing or not seeing with irons.
Also, average LEOs in 2022 training are starting on dots.
He’s living in 1980.
It’ll also crack me up when in 2027, most LEO stock service pistols will have RDS…
But IDPA SSP will still be irons only.
Maybe with their 2040 rules update….
Also, my personal opinion is that red dot instructors are remiss if they don’t have a dedicated point shoot / ghost ring window / general slide alignment contact shot teaching session to break noobs of the concept that they absolutely have to visualize lined up sights to make every shot.
That’s on the instruction, not the equipment.
@JHC see above
With BUIS, nothing changes in the startle draw / off alignment than irons.
Yes and no. Shooting a dot has helped me see faster, and stabilize the sight(s) sooner. Its helped me get better at shooting, and not specifically with irons. However, with irons at distance (20 yds+) I feel like I have to work harder to confirm the rear sight alignment. It's tempting to shortcut the process and use the fiber, and that results in not-so-great hits.
Bottom line: I need to practice iron sight shooting if I'm going to keep shooting iron sights. And I am definitely going to. I like iron sights, and want to keep my skills with them.
“There is no growth in the comfort zone.”--Jocko Willink
"You can never have too many knives." --Joe Ambercrombie