drmweaver2
Member
- Joined
- Jun 23, 2016
- Messages
- 105
- Reaction score
- 74
Relatively new shooter here.
I'm kinda curious, especially because of the costs of shooting 9mm ammo vs 22LR ammo whether I'll get any benefit from shooting my full size M&P 22 as far as preparing to shoot USPSA/IDPA matches? Eventually I want to shoot at least a few USPSA/IDPA matches with my SD9VE (I know, it's NOT a real competition level pistol, but it's what I have).
Right now, I'm still at the "get some rounds downrange/under my belt" stage. I'm definitely learning about eye dominance, sight picture/alignment and trigger control - but at a snail's pace and on indoor ranges shooting at paper targets. My SD9VE shooting shows similar results to my M&P 22 shooting - usually low left but I am mostly "controlling" the SD9VE's recoil (at least that is what a fellow shooter who has watched me shoot both pistols tells me).
The indoor range doesn't allow "rapid fire" (though that's the official position, I've heard numerous shooters doing double taps under 1sec), holster draws or movement. Some of that "practice deficit", I've read, can be overcome via dry fire at home. But, it's still not actual shooting.
I'm stuck buying my ammo commercially as I don't do re-loads for various reasons.
Thoughts? Wasting my time with the 22 as far as hoping for influence on when I might start shooting the 9mm competitively?
I'm kinda curious, especially because of the costs of shooting 9mm ammo vs 22LR ammo whether I'll get any benefit from shooting my full size M&P 22 as far as preparing to shoot USPSA/IDPA matches? Eventually I want to shoot at least a few USPSA/IDPA matches with my SD9VE (I know, it's NOT a real competition level pistol, but it's what I have).
Right now, I'm still at the "get some rounds downrange/under my belt" stage. I'm definitely learning about eye dominance, sight picture/alignment and trigger control - but at a snail's pace and on indoor ranges shooting at paper targets. My SD9VE shooting shows similar results to my M&P 22 shooting - usually low left but I am mostly "controlling" the SD9VE's recoil (at least that is what a fellow shooter who has watched me shoot both pistols tells me).
The indoor range doesn't allow "rapid fire" (though that's the official position, I've heard numerous shooters doing double taps under 1sec), holster draws or movement. Some of that "practice deficit", I've read, can be overcome via dry fire at home. But, it's still not actual shooting.
I'm stuck buying my ammo commercially as I don't do re-loads for various reasons.
Thoughts? Wasting my time with the 22 as far as hoping for influence on when I might start shooting the 9mm competitively?