To me, I add natural point, to the balance or feel of a gun. A model 10 heavy barrel (4") square butt is about the best that I have in my collection that feels like I can close my eyes, bring the gun up, open my eyes and the gun is right there ready for the shoot. Not too heavy, not too long, the ammo does'nt seem to add weight to the gun (like when you jam a magazine in a lightweight pistol) and they shoot different as they empty. Theat model 10 shoots great and I seldom use the sights, I just point the gun and it hits. In the N frames models, I like the 5 inch barrel with a half lug and in J frames I like the 2 inch barrel steel guns for the feel I talked about. When I shoot the J frame airweights, the feel of the gun with 5 live rounds is different than the unloaded feel (I look at this as a safety devise for me, I know when it is loaded when I pick it up) So feel came be a good thing or an informational thing when you look at it in those terms. The gun that realy points and is balanced is a 4 inch luger. I can look at the target, close my eyes, raise the gun, fire, and the result is a hit (99%) of the time. I caution anyone just trying this, be safe please, I generally keep my eyes open when shooting,

for me the grip angle is perfect and amounts to you raising you shooting hand and pointing at something, the Luger's grip is so natural for me--thats why I can shoot it as I described earlier. A close second for me would be a 4 5/8 inch single action revolver, jerking the revolver from the holster, turning the barrel up and shooting results in a pretty desent hit (even from the hip), the gun seems to be a natural for me to shoot. My shooting pal loves the birdshead design because it fits his hands better and I can't shoot them to save my life. So I guess it is a combination of things that makes a good shooter for someone.
I hope I didn't bore anyone.
