You will get better with all guns when you improve with one, because much of what you learn on grip, recoil Mgt, sight alignment .....will cross pollenate. You will probably be better with your goto gun, but your Glock will pace along.
PB
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You will get better with all guns when you improve with one, because much of what you learn on grip, recoil Mgt, sight alignment .....will cross pollenate. You will probably be better with your goto gun, but your Glock will pace along.
PB
If you can't shoot and move, or shoot moving, strong hand, weak hand, you are just punching holes in paper. That is the way EARLY LEO Firearms training was.
You have to crawl before you stand and walk. Having an area where you can MOVE and SHOOT is very beneficial.
OP, go with the M&P. If it's easier for you, take the advantage.
Standardize pistols, parts, and mags. Buy ammo and classes.
Practice what you learn.
Train with someone good and low frills like Earnest Langdon. I also recommend getting something like a DA/SA and learn how to shoot with that. The best thing I ever did to build my skills, other than train, was to shoot an HK LEM (std, not light). The trigger pretty bad, and difficult to stage or predict. It trained me To just focus on pressing the trigger consistently and focus on the front sight. After I learned that I found other guns to be no problem. The DA/SA is similar. Get a Beretta 92 or something that other shooters will claim is hard, or not ergonomic. DO NOT get a Glock and put an apex trigger in it or buy a 1911 with a 3 pound trigger. That is a recipe for shooting poorly, IMHO. Also, get some steel plates and a timer.
Monogamy and putting in work.
Best advice I can give