Even for experienced shooters, there is a great benefit for shooting with a good instructor. My primary shooting partner, another long-time instructor, has helped me more than once. Sometimes what we thing we are doing dry-fire doesn’t translate to what we are actually doing. And diagnosis via the Internet just isn’t the same.
I also think some platforms just don’t work for some people. For me personally, I find LEM the hardest trigger system to run well at speed. For me, the light take-up and then wall is a pre-made flinch waiting to happen. But that’s just me, and some people run them really well and prefer the other benefits such as increased safety.
The batman-gripped HK's can be a weird animal when it comes to grip. As mentioned above, they are more round rather than square and that can lead to torquing. Also, what feels "right" in the hand while just holding the gun is not necessarily what will give you the best shooting results. For me the large backstrap feels intuitively too big, and pushes into the palm of my hand, but the extra trigger reach length makes a huge difference for my ability to work the trigger well, and that is what really matters. I also have strength-limiting issues in my hands and with my unique situation, I can crush grip larger things more effectively than smaller ones. Obviously your situation will dictate in that regard.
Lastly: Friction. The HK grips are really good looking, but not nearly traction-y enough for me. The area's above the side panels are bar-of-soap-smooth, and even the panels themselves are not grippy enough. I stipple mine to high hell (an HK? The horror!) but talon grips are a cheap and easy thing to try. I cannot shoot shoot a stock P30 without grip mods whatsoever, its a wet noodle, but grip it up and the thing is rock solid. . .
https://pistol-forum.com/showthread....metric-Tension
When my hand strength was jacked up due to nerve damage, this helped me.
Other than that, why force yourself to a particular gun? You aren't issued one, don't have to stick with it, etc. If it doesn't work for you, bin it and move to something that fits you more naturally.
Sorta around sometimes for some of your shitty mod needs.
Only reason to stick with the P30 right now is, it's the only thing I have here, besides my dad's 1911 that only reliably feeds 230-ball.
But I concur if my cut down backstrap doesn't resolve the issue satisfactorily, I'll be moving on from the platform (which I really like). Initially, I didn't seem to be having these problems, but I think I was so focused on learning the trigger, that I didn't notice these smaller issues. When I say I'm dipping and dropping, we're talking moving from 9s and 10s to 7s and 8s. It's not the worst accuracy in the world, but it isn't the best, either.
That said, I may plan to move on, anyways. The polymer framed guns a little snappy for my tastes and I'm leaning towards going to an all-steel gun of some type (hence my strong interest in the Hudson H9).
Last edited by RevolverRob; 01-22-2018 at 04:31 PM.
If the trigger stacking of the P30 is a hard to beat issue, if you like the clean break of a 1911 and if you're going to change platform, may I suggest the VP9; at least you get to keep using the same mags.
" La rose est sans pourquoi, elle fleurit parce qu’elle fleurit ; Elle n’a souci d’elle-męme, ne demande pas si on la voit. » Angelus Silesius
"There are problems in this universe for which there are no answers." Paul Muad'dib
You might try a cocked and locked P30S or USP.
Last edited by 1slow; 01-22-2018 at 05:40 PM.