Things sure are different today compared to years back. I don't want or mean my post to be insulting but just saying what I observed. The people I saw shooting were only using Automatics, and smaller calibars. .25 auto, .380, .32 acp, and one .40 cal. I took the time to pick up the spent casings. They ALL had the paper targets up close 5 to 10 feet, not yds. They never hit a 10 ring. Most couldn't hit the paper with a full magazine. One fellow had his target within 1 foot of his out stretched gun hand and his shots were in the 8 ring or WORSE if you can imagine missing so close.
When I was young, I went with a .22 asked for help from a range supervisor if I had trouble with the sights. Everyone was friendly and would talk guns and even share their handgun to let you feel a "new" one. I slowly moved up in calibar when I kept the majority of shots on the paper at 2/3 of the distance of the range. I would see mostly 1911's or .38 special revolvers in use back then.
I would have offered help but I didn't speak their lanquage and a few others looked too scary to me to even help show them anything. I think there still are places to shoot like the old days, I just need to look some more.
When I was young, I went with a .22 asked for help from a range supervisor if I had trouble with the sights. Everyone was friendly and would talk guns and even share their handgun to let you feel a "new" one. I slowly moved up in calibar when I kept the majority of shots on the paper at 2/3 of the distance of the range. I would see mostly 1911's or .38 special revolvers in use back then.
I would have offered help but I didn't speak their lanquage and a few others looked too scary to me to even help show them anything. I think there still are places to shoot like the old days, I just need to look some more.