Ammo For Sale

« « NRA Board Member Ronnie Barrett | Home | Ed jew kay shun » »

22LR training

Pros and Cons.

7 Responses to “22LR training”

  1. Robin Says:

    I have trained regularly for several years with a 22 conversion for a 1911. The article makes important points about what benefits you cannot get but that said, you can benefit quite a bit. I disagree somewhat on the speed claim. I find the greatest benefit is in speeding up my sight picture acquisition which translates to faster shooting with my standard 45acp. You just have to remember that recovery after recoil isn’t as fast for a full 45 load:-)

    Also, I’ve learned to maintain my ciener conversion so that I regularly shoot 400 rounds in a range session without a failure of any kind. In fact the most common failure I encounter is a dud. YMMV.

  2. MH in GA Says:

    Almost anything that promotes practice is a good thing.

    That being said, practice does not make perfect– it makes “permanent.” If you lack fundamentals, you will simply ingrain things that promote missing and (more often) flawed tactics.

    One the subject of speed, one thing that I’ve found beneficial is not to practice faster, but to practice slower; performing a perfect, slow-motion draw, sight acquisition, trigger press and follow-through WILL make you faster, grasshopper. 😉

  3. MH in GA Says:

    Oops. “on” the subject of speed.

  4. nk Says:

    .22s have always had a special romance for me. (Likely because that’s what I had in my most impressionable years.) I don’t think that they’re just trainers or plinkers. The better ones are very decent firearms in their own right.

  5. comatus Says:

    “Very decent firearms”: “damned with faint praise.”

    The general lack of respect for the .22 as an art in itself must reflect the fact that most of you are just not paying enough for smallbore ammunition. A brief visit with a Lapua representative should quickly set priorities straight.

  6. nk Says:

    I have only been shooting Remington standard velocity for the last thirty years or so.

  7. Tam Says:

    The general lack of respect for the .22 as an art in itself must reflect the fact that most of you are just not paying enough for smallbore ammunition. A brief visit with a Lapua representative should quickly set priorities straight.

    Alas, the school wouldn’t let me keep the Anschutz when I dropped out.

    Just because a .22 “understudy” gun is good for inexpensive practice doesn’t necessarily mean the person using it for such thinks the caliber is useless for other things as well.

Remember, I do this to entertain me, not you.

Uncle Pays the Bills

Find Local
Gun Shops & Shooting Ranges


bisonAd

Categories

Archives