I don't have one at the moment, but it helps to make sure you have a good barrel crown. Also the trigger is adjustable; good to experiment with.
Back_RoadsThat is a very interesting target diagram and I can see how those things would affect the shots from a pistol. Sadly, I'd be all of them. There is no consistency in the the pellets even on misses. I've taken 10 shot groups at 20 feet resting and the target looks like shotgun spread. I am going to continue practicing and shooting the P17, might dedicate a whole tin of pellets one morning to just shooting that pistol till I either get it shooting solid groups or till I find out it's something gun specific.
Air guns have the added difficulty of the pellet staying in the bore for a comparative eternity compared to a firearm.
Quote from: Cslinger on July 12, 2022, 11:04:09 PMAir guns have the added difficulty of the pellet staying in the bore for a comparative eternity compared to a firearm.Wow, this is so true- I never thought about it like that. In that case, I’d argue that shooting pellet guns is the perfect trainer for honing pistol skills in general. Lessons learned on pellet guns will transfer over to powder burners. Great perspective!Turby
Your job is to aim, squeeze the trigger and follow through. Don't fight the gun... simply support the gun.