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I took some photos of a "wandering index finger" - remember, I have XL hands. Here is the slide show: http://www.bobergarms.com/photo/photo/slideshow?albumId=2312567:Alb...
If you have a "wandering index finger", and have very large hands, you could reach the muzzle of an XR9-S, and you should definitely not consider buying any other "mouse gun" in this size class.
Why EXACTLY is using the grip for stability a bad habit? I have small hands and my XD45 is checkered there for exactly that purpose; I place much better when I use the guard for purchase and my control is (obviously) much more solid. I can clear my in the pants holster and put three out of five in the first two rings, at speed and at 25 yards consistantly; the ONLY way I can achieve this is by using the guard for the added recoil control. Why exactly is this behavior a "bad habit" on my part?
Jason said:Why EXACTLY is using the grip for stability a bad habit? I have small hands and my XD45 is checkered there for exactly that purpose; I place much better when I use the guard for purchase and my control is (obviously) much more solid. I can clear my in the pants holster and put three out of five in the first two rings, at speed and at 25 yards consistantly; the ONLY way I can achieve this is by using the guard for the added recoil control. Why exactly is this behavior a "bad habit" on my part?
Mainly because if you're shooting a pocket pistol you might slip and roast/blow off your finger.
Seriously though, while I have no way of knowing how solid and consistent that grip is for you to get into under extreme stress-- where you're not thinking about the shooting as much as what you're shooting at --it's indeed possible that it works best for you. But nobody that I've ever heard of who teaches combat shooting for a living teaches that grip. It's possible that if more people tried it they could make it work, but I suspect it's not taught because it's considered too intricate and less secure than a four-fingers on four-fingers style full grip. That's certainly how I feel about it, but I'm not a pistol instructor.
Target-narrow apertures are common on combat pistol sights too, but they hinder rapid sight acquisition, so some harmless texture on a trigger guard hardly surprises me nor means it needs to be utilized, rather it just accommodates a few more customers with no downside. Anyway, pocket guns are designed with inherent trade-offs, and disallowing fairly unorthodox technique on a defensive pistol that's 5" long but hits like a G26 is a trade-off most people will accept, and chances are pretty even that if you ever have to pull it out to fire, you'll end up shooting one handed anyway. But I'd certainly retrain if you value both this pistol's advantages and your index finger. Your call. :-)
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