redfisherdave
Member
This grip works for me.

That grip will be brutal with .44 magnum loads, at least for me. I use it with left hand target shooting in PPC style with target loads, but use the thumbs over for right hand. I have small hands, and that grip is painful with magnum loads.This grip works for me.
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I've been shooting handguns for 40 years, my father was a military firearms instructor and taught me to shoot, I've qualified expert with every firearm I've ever had to qualify with, handgun and long gun. I'm no authority and I'm no instructor but I've got plenty of experience and I'm a good shot. I just happened to have a j-frame, a single action percussion revolver, and a 1911 sitting on my counter when I read your post. I went and picked each of them up and gripped them as I would to shoot them, both one and two handed, and I can assure you that I use the same grip with each of them. My hand molds to the grip and the gun(s) point naturally for me.
Because an "expert" says it's so in his book or his video doesn't mean it's the only way, it just means that it's the best way he's found for what he's doing and what works on the competion range doesn't always translate to what work elsewhere.
If I'm on duty and I have to use my primary weapon, a Beretta 8000D, and it fails, when I transition to my back up, a j-frame, I don't need to be switching grips or worrying about my thumb being high or low. I need to get my weapon into action and put rounds on target. I may be shooting one handed or two, left or right, regardless my grip will be the same. That's why my work guns are DAO with no safeties, nothing to think about when going from one to the other. That's also why I use a modified Weaver stance, it's the same stance I fight from, shoot handguns from, and shoot rifles from. Like bubbajoe45 said - KISS.
As you may notice, I was addressing your assertion that attempting to replicate a thumbs-forward grip resulted in a compromised strong hand grip - which it does not.
I will also continue to disagree on taking KISS to the extent of making everything 100% the same between all different platforms. This results in compromised functionality or ability in one platform or another. I guess the real thing I don't understand is how anybody picks up a revolver and thinks it feels exactly as if they picked up an auto. The frame and stock types are completely different between the two platforms, resulting in completely different feels. I would have to consciously force myself to use any kind of thumbs-forward grip on a revolver because it is so completely unnatural to me - the frame style just doesn't allow it to work. Similarly, I find it unnatural to use a tucked-thumb grip on an auto, as the platform is naturally suited to a thumbs-forward grip - totally different feel there.
My hands naturally go to different grips on different types of weapons both from what subconsciously "feels right" as well as from built-up muscle memory.
Now, I do not use any of my techniques simply because somebody said I should. Will I try out different people's suggestions - especially from experienced and well-reknown shooters? You bet. I will try them out for myself and see what works best. And I - as well as a great multitude of others around the world - have found that a thumbs-forward grip works best for autos and a tucked-thumb grip works best for revolvers. (The basical physical implications behind the construction of these grips also gives them a great deal of credit beyond most "traditional" methods) Hence why I suggest these grips to other shooters. You don't have to use them, but to say that the weak hand in either grip negatively alters the strong-handed grip is utterly false.
Just wondering, have you tried thumbs-forward on an auto for at least one session? Quite frankly, I don't know of anyone who has seriously tried out thumbs-forward and then subsequently abandoned the technique. We've all found it to provide greater stability and increased recoil control over other alternatives.
I didn't say that revolvers and autos feel the same,
When things go bad you will default to your training. Suppose you lose the use of your support hand. Try shooting that auto one handed (right AND left) with your "thumbs-forward" grip and let me know how it works out for you. Maybe that will help you understand what I'm talking about.
these videos may help...............http://www.myoutdoortv.com/pdk/web/smith.html?feedPID=00zG15zm84msK0GbWemanhJ0KNWQYqM4
i use the second grip "j frame" when shooting my 686, 6 inch barrel. if i am practicing with my snub nose model 64, i'll only use one hand, weak or strong, and DAO. its the only way to prepare for self defense.
I practice both strong and weak hand drills at *every* range outing. Again, using a high and forward thumb on autos produces the most stable platform, and the best results. Phsyically speaking, it will always produce a more torsionally rigid platform by speading the extent of your lateral contact over a longer vertical span. Also, on any auto with a frame-mounted safety, such a grip ensures that the safety is off when you are commencing firing.
While I do train for USPSA, I also train for self-defense, and take it very seriously - far moreso than gaming.
Also, I do get tired of people putting down the practical shooting sports because they are "gaming, not training". The basic skills you will either acquire or improve in the practical shooting sports are completely applicable to real-life usage. The thing is to realize what aspects are just part of the game, and which aren't. The actual core gun-handling skills are the same - it's still all about trigger control, sight alignment, and recoil management. Also, while not equivalent to the stress experienced in a real-life shootout, the added competitive aspect of the sports does add an extra element of stress that isn't there for static range shooting and basic training. Feeling the pressure of "the clock" helps you understand how things can go out the window when you thought you had it under control.
To reiterate - the practical shooting sports can help you greatly improve defensive firearms skills, as long as you know what to take from them, and what to leave on the course.
Again, have you experimented with the thumbs-forward technique on autos at the range? If you have, fine - if not, don't go knocking something like this until you've tried it for yourself.