Good Ol' Boy
Member
Here me out. This is for everyone in general but more for folks that may be wondering why they should spend time pulling the trigger on an empty gun.
My personal opinion is that dry fire mainly gets you intimately familiar with your trigger. Along with proper grip it can "prepare" one for live fire but it is NOT a replacement.
To me this seems obvious but it may not be for some folks. Dry fire is well spent time but it's all in vain if you don't get out and regularly test it with live fire.
And by "regularly" I dont mean dry firing year round and live firing once every month or more.
This is my opinion. I'm anxious to hear what more experienced folks have to say.
My personal opinion is that dry fire mainly gets you intimately familiar with your trigger. Along with proper grip it can "prepare" one for live fire but it is NOT a replacement.
To me this seems obvious but it may not be for some folks. Dry fire is well spent time but it's all in vain if you don't get out and regularly test it with live fire.
And by "regularly" I dont mean dry firing year round and live firing once every month or more.
This is my opinion. I'm anxious to hear what more experienced folks have to say.