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<blockquote data-quote="ProBusiness" data-source="post: 3080964" data-attributes="member: 6145"><p>IMO I do not like the red dot optic on a handgun at first. A handgun has a front and back sight and it takes alignment of both of these when the trigger is pulled to get good accuracy. With a red dot you are only looking at the dot on the paper. 1st, it is only one dot, one thing to align and this is not as good as two. second, the red dot does not teach how to properly shoot a handgun using the front and back sight. so, first i think a shoot should be profecient with the two sights on a handgun, once they are good at this then go to the one dot on the paper. Seeing a lot of both, I have been teaching the concealed carry course since 2009 and beginning handgun since 2007, very few beginners can shoot a red dot real accurate. it does not teach you to keep the sights lined up, the gun, the muzzle aligned with you pull the trigger and the patterns are usually bigger that guns shot with both sights.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ProBusiness, post: 3080964, member: 6145"] IMO I do not like the red dot optic on a handgun at first. A handgun has a front and back sight and it takes alignment of both of these when the trigger is pulled to get good accuracy. With a red dot you are only looking at the dot on the paper. 1st, it is only one dot, one thing to align and this is not as good as two. second, the red dot does not teach how to properly shoot a handgun using the front and back sight. so, first i think a shoot should be profecient with the two sights on a handgun, once they are good at this then go to the one dot on the paper. Seeing a lot of both, I have been teaching the concealed carry course since 2009 and beginning handgun since 2007, very few beginners can shoot a red dot real accurate. it does not teach you to keep the sights lined up, the gun, the muzzle aligned with you pull the trigger and the patterns are usually bigger that guns shot with both sights. [/QUOTE]
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