SIRT laser training

Unanimous vote for dry fire from my household.... The little bit that my son and I have doe have helped us tremendously. It's the get up off the couch part that's the trick.

Friday morning is my range training time and I'm going to work in some dry fire drills before I start live fire today.
 
After playing with my SIRT for a couple weeks, I can say that the feature I like most is the auto-resetting trigger.

I adjusted the laser down so that I don't see it when I am dry firing. You can even turn the lasers completely off if you want.

With the auto-resetting trigger, I can dry fire hundreds of times in a few minutes. I wish it came with 2 mags so I could practice mag reloads better.

One thing to do to increase your grip strength is to use some hand grippers. Keep one in your car and one on your couch.

You don't even have to get off the couch to use them!

41s63EJp7TL._SY300_.jpg
 
LuckyDucky (Spencer) said:
After playing with my SIRT for a couple weeks, I can say that the feature I like most is the auto-resetting trigger.

With the auto-resetting trigger, I can dry fire hundreds of times in a few minutes.
This is the only reason I've ever considered buying one.
 
save your money up and head to TDSA if you haven't been already...best $ I've spent imo
 
Jennifer S. said:
Hard to do when coming from SC.........
There were numerous out of state folks in the class when I went. Cali, Nevada, Oregon, Tx, AR, etc...

But theres probably some good instruction available near SC too.
 
The Antichrome said:
There were numerous out of state folks in the class when I went. Cali, Nevada, Oregon, Tx, AR, etc...

But theres probably some good instruction available near SC too.
We had some folks from Canada in mine last year! Amazing!
 
LuckyDucky (Spencer) said:
One thing to do to increase your grip strength is to use some hand grippers. Keep one in your car and one on your couch.

You don't even have to get off the couch to use them!

41s63EJp7TL._SY300_.jpg

YES! Use them in your hands while driving, watching TV, or whatever. My weakest trait while MotoX racing was having enough grip for a 20 minute moto,while holding on the the handlebars with a death grip.

Learned two things. One to use the exercisers, and also learned to relax the hands when it wasn't necessary to have them tightly gripped, and I think the same applies to shooting. I noticed myself having the death grip all of the time, and applied the earlier lesson. Later stages, the hands aren't fatigue'd
 
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