How to use Iron Sights efficiently | Tim Herron Interview

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  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
  • How to use iron sights always returns discussion about front sight focus. The reality is a front sight focus isn't the most efficient way to use your irons. Tim Herron, a three division USPSA Grand Master and 1911 extraordinaire talks on how to most efficiently use iron sights.
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Комментарии • 368

  • @TheHumbleMarksman
    @TheHumbleMarksman  9 месяцев назад +3

    Check out current discount codes and other socials here: linktr.ee/thehumblemarksman

    • @blazey2765
      @blazey2765 Месяц назад

      Somtimes it's presentation

  • @buddy22801012
    @buddy22801012 8 месяцев назад +96

    What most Instructors don’t mention is that in a true combat situation where your life is in danger YOUR BRAIN WILL NOT ALLOW YOU TO TAKE YOUR FOCUS OFF THE THREAT. front sight focus works well for target purists. But combat shooting you will have to focus on the threat so that’s how you need to practice.

    • @lunaticred1277
      @lunaticred1277 3 месяца назад +4

      Very good point, one wouldn't even no this unless he has experience with a threat. Great advice thanks.

    • @Aherrxs
      @Aherrxs 13 дней назад

      Never thought about this. Good thinking tbh

    • @JohnLee-jk5ew
      @JohnLee-jk5ew 9 дней назад

      Is it also true that when the adrenaline rush hits, keeping one eye closed is impossible?

    • @larryoquendotorres9470
      @larryoquendotorres9470 8 дней назад

      Bingo

    • @souljaboy.6668
      @souljaboy.6668 3 дня назад

      i always think 'your hitting a baseball, why would you look at your bat?'

  • @garyhuber3462
    @garyhuber3462 Год назад +88

    There's a huge difference between ten ring target shooting (front sight focus ) and combat or action shooting (target and rear sight acquisition focus). Practice, practice, practice for muscle memory and instinctive aiming.

    • @ehsnils
      @ehsnils Год назад +1

      @@the1knifepro169 Simo Häyhä used iron sights, and he used the aim that worked for him.
      I was shooting the Swedish K when I did my military service and it had iron sights.

    • @emilymiller1853
      @emilymiller1853 6 месяцев назад +2

      Whoever argued combat rear sight focus is wrong. 😅

    • @citizenskilldevelopment7273
      @citizenskilldevelopment7273 6 месяцев назад

      No there isnt

    • @handlebarhammer
      @handlebarhammer 6 месяцев назад

      I would think I someone shot 2 train car loads of ammo, you wouldn't even need sights to get a hit.

  • @wadeirwin7003
    @wadeirwin7003 Год назад +57

    I have been a slave to the “front sight focus” dogma from my first training class years ago and after watching this interview went to the range to try and be aware of the sights in general(both front and rear)as well as the target as an altogether sight picture. Groups became more consistent and I was able to be a little more relaxed in acquiring a sight picture using both sights plus target as a package. Always stressed a bit when constantly trying to pick up and focus on a tiny dot. Thanks for the insights from a couple of pros!

    • @jmkhenka
      @jmkhenka 9 месяцев назад +3

      Its quite intresting that when shooting clays (shotguns), the focus is always the target (ie, the clay). And if you start to aim the shotgun, you will miss more then you hit. And thats with the basic shotgun sights - just a front sight and no rear sight.
      clay shooting needs a well fitting shotgun to perform good, but focus is always the clay and the shotgun should just be there.
      whereas pistol shooting is teached "front sight", but my right eye has a refractive error so in certain lighting conditions the sights gets really hard to focus on. So will try and train this, as it would relax my eyes more.
      Really insightfull video..

    • @johngregory4801
      @johngregory4801 7 месяцев назад +3

      The only thing I've ever been able to do consistently while focusing on my front sight is suck. By focusing on where I want the bullet to go in the target and bringing my sights into line with it, my groups are consistently better.

  • @joshuaputman8307
    @joshuaputman8307 Год назад +24

    Having shot target archery for many years, I was taught to focus on the spot I wanted to hit and let the pin float. When I started shooting pistols years later I just automatically did the same thing with iron sights.
    Then having pistol instructors tell me to focus on the front sight, I tried, but just never could get the knack for it. I still focus on the spot I want to hit.
    It's nice hearing that I was doing it right the whole time. 😁

  • @midwestg4105
    @midwestg4105 8 месяцев назад +29

    Sorry, but I am 68 and I only use iron sights----and have generally (at ranges of 3-25 yards) focused on the targets and had the iron sights slightly blurry. It has thus far served me well.

    • @armedfarm3429
      @armedfarm3429 9 дней назад

      Yes, thats what I'm trying to say, but I usually can focus on the front sight & the target back & forth.

  • @kensakata5124
    @kensakata5124 2 года назад +54

    Discovered target focused iron sight shooting basically on my own a year or two ago -- primarily because I began to experiment with red dots, and I started to really develop an interest in IDPA where the inefficiencies of front sight focused shooting became painfully apparent. Hearing high level shooters validate this technique is pretty fulfilling. From the very beginning as a new shooter, and as recently as 5 or 6 years ago, the mantra of every instructor I had was "front sight, front sight, front sight". This might be acceptable for slow fire bullseye/accuracy shooting, but for modern shooting sports and defensive type shooting, it's a handicap, yet I still see it being taught as dogma.

    • @CramcrumBrewbringer
      @CramcrumBrewbringer Год назад +8

      100% agree. For anything besides getting a perfectly accurate shot in a controlled environment, it's a handicap.

  • @FernandoChaves
    @FernandoChaves 3 года назад +53

    Great video! Thank you! I started shooting when I was 8 years old, taught by my father. Over 30 years ago I was a pistol instructor for a while. Other than a mandated concealed carry class when I moved to another state I haven't taken any formal training in 30 years, but I do practice. Over the years I have taught a number of people to shoot, especially women, just as a friendly thing to do. Poking around on the internet now I find so much discussion on these matters. The way I learned, the primary focus is always the target and if it isn't you shouldn't even have a finger on the trigger let alone fire the weapon. Whether iron sight, scopes, red dots, pistols, rifles, shotguns, the principle is the same. When I was 8, after putting rounds on paper with a Marlin .22 lever gun, my dad taped the sights over and tossed clay pigeons. I had to learn to shoot those, and I did, with no sights. Over the years I "modernized" my grip and stance, but never lost the focus on the target. It just seems so obvious to me. I was at a commercial range a couple years ago and had a conversation with the young man behind the counter. He criticized me for not taking classes, he was an instructor and assured me things had changed and I had developed bad habits over the years. He hadn't even seen me shoot yet. He was pretty proud of himself, almost arrogant, open carrying a full size duty weapon at work. Then he saw me shoot. Do I have bad habits? Absolutely, but they have more to do with my wife than my shooting. LOL!

    • @kennylavay8492
      @kennylavay8492 Год назад +9

      Agree always focus on the target and bring the gun up and the sights will be in focus on the target. sorta like shooting clays. follow the bird and bring the gun up to the bird and the sight on the gun will automatically focus on the bird.

    • @nagoogle8542
      @nagoogle8542 Год назад +4

      @@kennylavay8492 mist be why the original way of shooting a pistol in the military was one handed like the barrel was your index finger and you were pointing

    • @davidbayne2845
      @davidbayne2845 5 месяцев назад

      Because the instructors came from a match target shooting background, they taught a style not appropriate for high stress and dynamic gun fights. Shooting 24 MOA under stress with a pistol is more than combat effective but may be easier with two hands and target focus.

  • @TinyGuyTinyHouse
    @TinyGuyTinyHouse Год назад +10

    Man, I was at the range today, for the second time, wondering why I couldn't make it on paper. I started looking at the target, and it finally came together. Thank you.

  • @csipawpaw7921
    @csipawpaw7921 Год назад +14

    This is why the rear gutter sights were and in some cases still are popular. A rear gutter sight will help a shooter align the pistol to a target faster than adjustable rear sights because the sides of the gutter quickly tells the shooter if the gun is aligned left, right or centered!

  • @got2kittys
    @got2kittys Год назад +7

    I was taught as a kid, always look at the target first. Also, shooting with both eyes open is easier with a reddot, but effective for iron sights. Practice practice.

  • @patrickcarleton3924
    @patrickcarleton3924 7 месяцев назад +4

    As a past US Olympic Rifle Team candidate and ex-military there is a diffence in application to specialities.
    Pistols and eifles.
    His explanations are pretty spot on though.
    He gives good advice.

  • @horustwohawks
    @horustwohawks Год назад +4

    I am an older shooter (not competition). Sorry for the long post... I originally learned what is discussed here. At some point (perhaps 10 or so years ago) with a seeming flood of "fierce front sight focus" leaning trends, I focused on learning that method. My aim skills decreased for a while and then ...well,. even after dialing it in, it just never was a fit for me. Not that you do not have to learn/understand about competent/proper sights focus and reacquisition technique, which includes strong front sight awareness, but... Returning to method of greater "target focus" with peripheral sights focus (say 30% or so), I am a more accurate and relaxed shooter (once again). I also feel more apt in environmental and situational awareness and moving, and pointing under pressure.
    I appreciate the video.
    There's a few other experts out there (Leatham, Hristov and many others) that discuss very well aspects of either point~shoot and/or other alternative interpretations of "front sight focus methods" that I found helpful (for breaking out of 'fierce front sight focus methods' dilemma /what caused some confusion for me personally [especially the fuzzy target result /thing]).
    I'm no expert so I have a little trepidation commenting. Many whom I admire (as experts) advocate hard 'front sight focus'. I am just one of those, perhaps due to decades of alternate old-school training, it just did not land for.
    I "do" (have always) conduct strong focus on the front sight, I simply take "focus" not to mean fixating or "looking directly at". I "look" at the smallest spot possible on what I am aiming at, whether shooting right out of the draw OR with/when gunsights at eye-level.
    If you are someone reading this, I hope it is helpful.

  • @davidbayne2845
    @davidbayne2845 5 месяцев назад +4

    I got trifocal glasses so I could finally focus on the front sight. Then realized I was faster and more consistent with target focus and soft focused sight picture. Target focus works best for shotguns too.

  • @jbar2.048
    @jbar2.048 3 года назад +23

    There is a video of Tim Herron drawing, shooting one round and splitting a playing card in half in 1.3 sec. I have seen him on a lot of podcasts, but I was unaware of his skill level.
    Some people scoff at trick shooting, but that's a hard shot to make.

  • @brianshuler9710
    @brianshuler9710 Год назад +8

    Like Tim and several of the commentors, over the past three years I have found myself naturally gravitating to a more target fucused technique. After decades of hard front iron sight shooting, I began experimenting with red dots while still shooting irons. Initially, as I worked to improve my speed at closer ranges, I realized I was using soft target focus. I fought to maintain a hard front sight focus, but, continued to go to a target focus out five to seven yards. It is now ingrained in my proceedure for closer targets.

  • @tbeiber09
    @tbeiber09 3 года назад +11

    It'll depend on type of shooting also, if you're training for a defensive purpose, you can assume you'll just automatically go to target focused because you need to know what's going on very intensely

  • @hopewilliams6705
    @hopewilliams6705 3 года назад +25

    Man honestly this is exactly what has happened to me recently I put a dot on my carry gun and in the last week shot some of my iron sight guns with the same focus I would with the dot and I was shocked at the speed and efficiency I could use the irons ! Great information

    • @hopewilliams6705
      @hopewilliams6705 Год назад +14

      @TheMemphis5 Edit your brain it's not a college paper it's a comment on the internet

    • @alexanderrohaj4794
      @alexanderrohaj4794 7 месяцев назад

      ​@TheMemphis5🤣 Lmao bruh

  • @OhioCruffler
    @OhioCruffler 3 года назад +27

    I Actually did exactly what he said when I went back to the irons after working with a dot for a while. The target focus approach has me shooting faster and better at close to medium range.

  • @CountryBoyShane
    @CountryBoyShane Год назад +4

    Totally noticed the same thing from shooting red dot and switching back to irons - the world is coming together!

  • @precisionmarksman5084
    @precisionmarksman5084 3 года назад +31

    It really depends on the shooting discipline you are competing in. As an experienced Bullseye shooter, for precision accuracy shooting Bullseye out to 50 yards one hand, only "Front Sight" Alignment and "Area Aim" the only way to go! The proof is 10 rounds "Slow Fire" one hand into a 5" group!

    • @aggrodkreg4321
      @aggrodkreg4321 3 года назад +15

      The problem is that people are only taught how to shoot the Bullseye way, even for more dynamic types of shooting. The technique isn't wrong, it's how it's taught and implemented that's the issue.

    • @jamesortega8681
      @jamesortega8681 2 года назад +1

      @@aggrodkreg4321 bottomline is try all styles and pick whatever works for you best

    • @kensakata5124
      @kensakata5124 2 года назад +7

      @@jamesortega8681 Bottom line is use the techniques that work best for the type of shooting you want to accomplish.

    • @jerrybennett2218
      @jerrybennett2218 2 года назад

      I am working on shooting at longer distances. I have Glock 9 mm’s and 10mm’s. I would like to shoot well at 50 and 100 yards. What ammo is best? Any tips?

    • @charlesludwig9173
      @charlesludwig9173 Год назад

      @@kensakata5124ight alignment is one of two shooting principles. It is not a technique. Technique is a particular sight picture selected on the shooters confidence of getting consistency from it over others.

  • @Mcdinks001
    @Mcdinks001 Год назад +2

    Finally somebody said it. I’m 19 years old and I’ve been shooting my entire life and have always naturally target focused. I worked at a gun range when I had just turned 18 and all the other ranger guys and salesman told me that I was looking at the sights wrong and that I would never be able to shoot correctly. So being the smart ass I am, I challenged them to a match and won. 3 matches in a row. And they still told me I was wrong 😂. Anyways. I can’t believe more people don’t naturally gravitate towards target focus.

    • @michaelshapiro1543
      @michaelshapiro1543 Год назад +1

      Good shooting! (But, I imagine you didn't shoot much in the first 3 years of your "entire life".)

  • @sumikajuutilainen1534
    @sumikajuutilainen1534 8 месяцев назад +8

    First time shooting a g19, used this advice where I focused on the target while overlapping it with the sights. Had a tight grip and quickly squeezed the trigger. My groups were within a 3 inches by 3 inches circle, it fucking works.

  • @nomikes4392
    @nomikes4392 3 года назад +7

    Different sight focus, among other things you have covered, is explicated in the classic Brian Enos book "Practical Shooting: Beyond Fundamentals"

  • @6236003
    @6236003 3 года назад +7

    I heard Tim say this in a podcast a couple years ago and filed it away under "that's interesting." After shooting red dots for a while I got my iron sight pistol out and sumbitch, that's more or less how it worked.

  • @DavidBrown-uc4yv
    @DavidBrown-uc4yv 8 месяцев назад +1

    I took 3 of Tim’s classes. I believe he is one of the very best. He backs up his theoretics with his own shooting ability, but more. Tim demonstrates the conventional wisdom vs his revised concepts. His ideas out compete, frankly. And it’s teachable and reachable. It applies to shooters of all three levels.

  • @TAVAAR7
    @TAVAAR7 3 года назад +8

    Thats encouraging, I naturally use a target focus with the irons as a soft peripheral focus and not had issues until I tried it the way other people taught hard front focus (in the process of trying to absorb all I could to learn and improve from those with years more experience than myself). Never had issues picking up a dot either, especially on platforms I do lots of dry practice with.

  • @andreandrews6237
    @andreandrews6237 Месяц назад

    This is what I’ve taught myself:
    The firearm is an extension of my body, so when I aim I’m simply looking at the target and waiting for my sights to obscure my vision. Im not overly focused on the sights just like I don’t focus on each of my individual fingers as I lift a cup. I’m barely focused on the sights at all, but once the target I was looking at gets covered by that little bit of red, I fire. And I repeat that process until the mag is empty.
    I was able to stack rounds from 20 yards out. I EDC a Staccato CS, have been shooting for about a month

  • @funkla65
    @funkla65 3 года назад +9

    Also kinda hard to remain aware of the behavior of the target while you're focused on something at arm's length. A savvy prosecutor may pick at that scab during a trial.

  • @cornydad
    @cornydad 2 года назад +4

    I think one of the best ways to become a good iron sight shooter with a target focus is to shoot rifle with ghost ring sights. The eye needs to learn how to have a near ghost image and what sight alignment/sight picture looks like.

  • @jdglock9114
    @jdglock9114 3 года назад +14

    Just completed Frank Proctor (👍🏻) Pistol - “The Fundamentals of Fast”.
    Frank covered this with us.
    Rear - Front - Target seen together.
    Sharp front sight focus with fuzzy rear and target - BIG NO GO.
    My ten years of doing it wrong 🤦🏻‍♂️
    But now I’m on the path to improving.

  • @1SGPARKER
    @1SGPARKER Год назад +1

    I'm not criticizing these gentlemen or this video. But, there are a plethora of handgun experts on youtube who profess to know it all. Engaging an armed opponent is a challenging task. Hollywood movies make it look surprisingly easy. Paper targets take all the adrenaline and hyperactivity (stress) out of the reason most of us go armed; kill or disable a human being. I'm an old Vietnam-Era retired Army Airborne Infantryman (E8) who qualified Expert with a 1911A1 every time I had to. But, like I said when the paper target isn't trying to kill you, it is easy to slow down emotionally. I quickly learned to get control of my mind and emotions when facing a threat. Also, too many folks think 40 to 80 yard shots have a place with a pistol. If you're that far away in a civilian encounter you need to duck and cover - not try to exchange shots with a perp.

    • @TheHumbleMarksman
      @TheHumbleMarksman  Год назад +1

      You think you know but you don’t. The guest in this video trains LEO/MIL

  • @CitizenCarrier
    @CitizenCarrier 2 месяца назад

    I had someone tell me this a long time ago. Use the notch on the rear sight first as your window on the target. If your target is not in the window. You’re not gonna hit it where you want to. I absolutely agree. Use the rear sight “window“ first then fine tune with the front sight. It’s always worked for me when I see you irons. And for me, the iron sights are almost a blur or appear as a ghost. It’s always been natural for me to target focus rather than front sight focus.

  • @jamesdelong6401
    @jamesdelong6401 Год назад +3

    Nice video. 👍 me personally I do a combination of front, rear, keeping both eyes open, and focus on my target. That most important thing is you GOTTA get out there and TRAIN, to further your shot placement and learning you firearm and gear.

  • @megastick9324
    @megastick9324 Год назад +8

    I gave up buckhorns for peep/aperture sights long ago. The peep let’s me focus on the target and ,as age creeps in, are MUCH easier to see and acquire quickly.
    I have red dots on some guns, but my levers get peeps and they work well, look through and put the post on the target, not much different than how a dot works.

    • @blackhawk7r221
      @blackhawk7r221 Год назад +4

      I’m with ya. Williams peep. As my eyes have grown older, I’ve had to file and narrow my front post to form a point. Huge difference. And add a drop of Testor’s model airplane flourescent paint.

    • @stevep959
      @stevep959 Год назад +3

      Thanks for this. I'm tossing up persisting with the buckhorn sights or going peeps on my 16" barrel lever gun. The more I read about older guys having trouble with their eyes as they get older, the more I'm leaning towards going with a peep.

  • @LoneStarLawman
    @LoneStarLawman Год назад +5

    Your distance determines what sight techniques you use. Combat distance, with a handgun (usually less than five yards) You only have time, to point and shoot. Both eyes will be wide open looking at the threat. Adrenaline will kick in.

  • @zen-Tii
    @zen-Tii 3 года назад +23

    My 73 year old eyes won’t “hard front sight focus” even if I wanted them to.😂

    • @wbwills2
      @wbwills2 3 года назад +3

      Have fun with it at the range & bet dollars to donuts you’d do fine if you were using your gun for serious business. Take care

  • @XCommonSensesX
    @XCommonSensesX Год назад +2

    My eyes won't let me front sight focus; no matter what I do it stays blurry but the target is clear. I just use my peripherals to line the sights up, or use one eye to aim at distance. With optics it's a very natural and easy transition 🙂

  • @doranmaxwell1755
    @doranmaxwell1755 8 месяцев назад +1

    I did notice that point shooting is actually getting a bit respectable these days at really close ranges fast.. or fast for me... I pretty much don't pay attention to the sights. I mean I do but no way do I try to focus on the front sight and the rear sight is just.. well there... for sure it is more in focus without trying to focus on it. Both sights are a blob to me with my eyes but the rear sight is just sharper by default. One thing tho... when I teach new shooters with handguns.... handguns are a steep learning curve and its not much fun if you miss all the time. I tell em to pretty much forget all that stuff. put some full sodas out about 10' or so.. forget stance... forget lining up the sights... forget grip or trigger pull. put the front sight on the can. They have plenty of time to do that. and.... when a full soda explodes? confidence goes up. When I do it at 25 yards they naturally want to do that. At that point we can 'refine' what they are doing. maybe we will move back to 10 yards... With just a little refining of their sight picture they are making some hits. I could be wrong but it sure seem that they learn faster... hell... they become downright competitive.

  • @pipemartz
    @pipemartz 3 года назад +13

    Videos like this help me out so much. I've improved my shooting with your channel more than any other. Thanks for the effort!

    • @wbwills2
      @wbwills2 3 года назад +3

      Yep, he’s good. I think the best thing is to know your gun and get comfortable with it and don’t get wrapped around the axle about any one thing you heard one guy say on RUclips. Don’t overthink it it’s what I’m saying… I think

  • @MD-mm1zv
    @MD-mm1zv Год назад +1

    Depends on the weapon being used.
    A shotgun, even when slugging, is rapid and target.
    A rifle is always front post at distance.
    1/3 cowitnessing a T2 on an AR, I find is the dot literally sitting on the tip of the post.
    It's pretty cool.
    And accurate.

  • @sightlinestrategies
    @sightlinestrategies Год назад +2

    Very well put Tim. Thank you and great question I wish more instructors would be challenged on. Just another example why Herron is a real one.

  • @mikefortney7879
    @mikefortney7879 3 года назад +7

    I agree with Tim in general. But I’ll say as a super senior iron sight shooter it also depends a lot on your eyes and your vision in general. As you get older your vision changes and a lot depends on how it has changed. Which is why so many older guys have switched to carry optics. I love iron sights and although I’m a life long “B” shooter as long as I can I’ll stick to it. Btw…I use target focus and always recoiled at FS gospel preachers.

    • @hawkgeoff
      @hawkgeoff Год назад +1

      Funny you say this... at 57 I can no longer focus on the front sight without readers...lol. focus on the target and balance the fuzz

    • @rik4369
      @rik4369 Год назад +4

      Agree 100%. 62 year old Retired Marine . I have recently went to Optics do to my eyes deteriorate. I have glasses and can still kill game out pass 300 yards.
      As to not focusing on the front sight is blasphemy to us older shooter LOL. I have learned to shoot my " optic box" for close up Pistol work. The Red Dot on my pistol just makes it easier to shoot from on the ground, on my belly or hiding behind cover.
      As to long range Rifle or Carbine accuracy, I disagree on the concept of not focusing on the front sight. The reason we " Call" our shots is we're recording where we saw the Front Sight when the round goes off. That helps you know it was good or bad shot from the shooter. Is a sight adjustment needed, or did I shot a bad shot, SHOT ANOTHER ONE.
      Because our eyes can't focus on two objects of different distances at the same time, at longer distances one gas to make a choice. Having clear Front Sight is critical at distances.
      I am just getting into Red Dots for longer range shooting. I primarily use my Carbines and Rifles for hunting.
      Not disavowing the Shooter in the video but shooting evolves and individuals like him are important to advancing the sport and techniques. I would recommend people try it, if it works perfect it by training/ practice.
      PS: The more important fundamental to me is that TRIGGER ( PULL OR PRESS). If that is screwed up it doesn't matter which sight a shooter focuses on.
      Semper Fi

  • @ChadKelly7
    @ChadKelly7 Год назад +2

    Interesting. I just got my Platypus in last week and first trip to the range I really noticed I'm terrible with Irons. Never practiced them the last 2 years since getting into shooting sports. Tested in my house dry firing and I can see trying to stay target focused working better for me. Going to give it a try this weekend out on my range!! Gotta learn something new to me now while I'm waiting for the red dot I want to be released from Primary Arms. Good excuse to finally teach myself irons!!

  • @zutrue
    @zutrue Год назад +2

    An interesting take on the iron sights front sight blade debate.
    The thing is, if you go the "expert" route, there is always a more
    decorated "expert" that sits on the side opposite to yours.
    At the end of the day, maybe you should just go with what works
    best for you. Just an opinion.

  • @kickingworld
    @kickingworld 9 месяцев назад +6

    With my iron sights (no optic in this scenario), I have an immensely difficult time to get rid of the blurry focus with my eyes when trying to focus on a 3 dot iron sight. However, if I’m looking at my target down range and when I go to the iron sights to get precise I found that if I do a quick blink when I’m looking closer at the sights I am able to quickly pick up the iron sight’s dots clearly and quickly align them. But if I’m looking down range and then back At the sight it seems to take 2+ seconds to get rid of that slow re focus if you will. Does this have anything to do with astigmatism, or is this something else, and if so, what? I noticed on sights that are blacked out in the rear and a bright glow front I do better with this, but still have the same issue. Is this bizarre about the quick blink bandaid solution? Btw this is all on a pistol. Thanks for any tips.

  • @topbone
    @topbone 2 года назад +1

    My mind has shifted, will try it out! Thank you for this eye opener advice.

  • @ChipSpencer123
    @ChipSpencer123 Год назад +1

    you bring so much value to the table. I get answers when I need them😀

  • @cwness4587
    @cwness4587 2 месяца назад

    I tried the front site thing about week. If you don't have the back site where it is suppose to be you shootin high,low,left, and right. Back to shooting the way I learned. Good video I was right all along.

  • @TheGentlemanGunner
    @TheGentlemanGunner Месяц назад

    Being kinda backwards and making 95% of my shooting career as a dot shooter and recently switching to irons…. I can see what he’s saying… like the dot… my sights just appear on the target because I picked up target focus from the dot and it hasn’t been difficult to be decent at it as a a result. Good Stuff

  • @rodralig
    @rodralig 3 года назад +3

    From his 2-day class - "anchoring the rear sight"...!

  • @stevenstrandberg4258
    @stevenstrandberg4258 2 месяца назад

    I love how they show Tim's truck to qualify his authority.

  • @nYdGeo
    @nYdGeo 7 месяцев назад

    I do not comprehend this at all. This conversation is a non-starter for me for a number of reasons. First, I'm not certain why it's so difficult to look at the front sight and get it on targets reliably and accurately. I do not find it difficult, nor do I experience that issue at all. I've also tried most of this myself. Early on as a new USPSA competitor, I was determined that I could and would learn to do it 'my way'. I had the muscle memory so tight that I drew and had perfect sight alignment immediately, tried soft target focus, tried the rear sight as it is so big and so close, etc., and continued to pattern instead of grouping until I switched focus to the front sight.
    There may be merit to this, but if so, it's at best usable for quick, loose accuracy at applicable ranges and worst case, it's useful only to folks such as Mr. Herron, who can afford to and have put tens if not hundreds of thousands of rounds downrange, while developing specialized techniques that work for them.
    Interesting video, and I thank you for it!

  • @hurricanepaul1
    @hurricanepaul1 3 года назад +4

    I'm glad you put into words of what I've been experiencing with irons after training heavily using a red dot.

  • @scottydoo330
    @scottydoo330 Год назад

    this is very interesting and makes total sense.......ive been on the job for 21 years. i cant wait to go to the range

  • @deanhorrell8336
    @deanhorrell8336 Год назад

    We ve been taught to focus on the front sight, Almost Exclusively, the rear must also be considered, especially at distance, Also at distance,if we are engaged the ranging must change.

  • @dambroangling2828
    @dambroangling2828 3 месяца назад

    This applies to sling shots as well, not that any of you care lol. I was using a slingshot in a apartment for the past few years until I just recently bought an acreage. Took me a while to realize that I needed to just "be one with my target" and then I nail them. If I am trying to "aim" I will get very close. But once i started only looking at the target and then taking the shot I was and am able to hit a fly out of the air. Once you get farther it is quite different bc you have to account for wind and drop and all of that. But you could put a dot anywhere in my apartment and I would smack it. Now I have to go try this with firearms! Never heard someone say this before, but I have noticed that when I do almost like a "quick scope" like one would do in a video game, I actually ended up hitting my target more frequently

  • @ironphill911
    @ironphill911 6 месяцев назад

    I'm not super experienced with pistols, but I feel like when I'm trying to be super accurate, and hit the exact same spot every time, I'm more front sight focused, but I take my time and shift to the target and back. If I'm trying to be fast, I'm more target focused, which is probably more of a real world scenario, but i have more stray rounds. Not by any real significant amount, but instead of tearing a 3 inch hole in the center of the target, there are bullet holes scattered in more of a 9 inch circle.

  • @gew1898
    @gew1898 3 года назад +16

    “Blessed are those who, in the face of death, think only about the front sight.”
    Jeff Cooper

    • @zsacrilege
      @zsacrilege 3 года назад +4

      The front sight won’t kill you. The “threat” will. Jeff Coopers advice predates red dots, and he died in 2006. Much respect for his work, but it’s outdated by a decade and half. And dead people can’t bless anyone.

    • @gew1898
      @gew1898 3 года назад +2

      @@zsacrilege the video was about the use of iron sights. Red dots may have their own doctrine but we are talking here about established doctrine concerning iron sights.

  • @mikem1457
    @mikem1457 5 месяцев назад

    I DEFINITELY won't speak to knowledge, but to me being "wrong handed, wrong eyed" but shoot pistol and throw darts right handed, can understand whats going on. General aiming and fine motion sight. Being able to laser focus and co-witness at the same time.

  • @dambroangling2828
    @dambroangling2828 3 месяца назад

    I guess you could say it is how a roofer doesnt have to focus on his arm or hammer to hit a nail on the head. They just quickly focus on nail and whack it. Or like hitting a wedge with a sledge hammer. Pros dont think about the swing. They look at spot and can whack it correctly every time.

  • @DWR2002
    @DWR2002 6 месяцев назад

    Plate shooting is a totally different discipline than bullseye shooting. A plate can be hit anywhere on it's surface and it will make a "ding" sound indicating that it has been hit. Generally a plate also does not need to be hit in the exact center to make the plate fall or move. So if shooting at plates, there is not necessarily a need to be as precise and therefore there could be latitude in the aiming process. However bullseye shooting is a more precise discipline where the most points are scored by hits being closer to the center of the target. The human eye is only capable of focusing on one object at a time. This is why while using iron sights the focus should be on the front sight. This provides for a more precise shot placement. I know a gentlemen who will even make a small scratch on his front sight to make him concentrate his focus on the front sight. He just happens to be a retired Marine, has competed on "Top Shots", and is a 10 time National Pistol Champion in bullseye competition shooting along with many more accolades and accomplishments. Look him up and check out some of his videos. Shooting styles may differ from one discipline to the other and from one person to another but X's count!!!

  • @cain2655
    @cain2655 Год назад +2

    this guy is a speed shooter, so am I two totally different types of shooting when you're shooting for speed you're pointing your gun when you're shooting for accuracy with a small 22 caliber rifle for instance, you do have to pay attention to the front sight. I don't even know why, a competition handgun shooter would be listed on a video like this all of us that she could still play and compete know the difference

  • @nevadadesertrat267
    @nevadadesertrat267 Год назад

    I shoot open sites as far as 1 mile as close as 15yds. At distance through a peep site you have to find the target first and not allow the front site to block the target. The front sight is never fully in focus. Today I was shooting my SKS at 800 meters with the combat sights I first find the target (Todays Target is 18 inches wide 24 inches tall.) then bring the gun up and allow its natural aim to level the sights on the target yet again nothing is totally in focus but I keep the target more focused than either site. At short distances 15-35 yards its all about the front sight. With my 454 casull or 357 wheel guns as soon as the front sight is on the next target I let the round go. Especially with the magnums if I keep focus on the front sight during recoil its easy to get the natural aim on the next target. One thing I dont hear a lot is talking about the natural aim. My father taught me how to point shoot. And that helped learn how to get a natural aim. Basally everything naturally lines up the 2 sites and the target. I like what he had to say and gives me some food for thought. TY
    NDR

  • @jasestrong
    @jasestrong Год назад

    Big Dad Thanks !great video!Iam one of those old school clear front sights guy! Looking forward to putting this to work.

  • @jackkielty8241
    @jackkielty8241 Год назад

    Though I may be bending the concept a bit I think the words "co-witnessing" is applicable. Overly focusing on either the front sight, rear sight, or the target individually is counter productive. Being able to see all three in conjunction with each other, i.e. "co-witnessing" those three reference points works best.

  • @jordangouveia1863
    @jordangouveia1863 7 месяцев назад

    I was always of the school of thought that front and rear sights were installed on a gun to be used together for aiming. Also they were installed on top of the gun not on the side of the gun. So I've always used both sights and held the gun upright.

  • @johnwilliams8654
    @johnwilliams8654 7 месяцев назад

    I don't have red dots on any of my pistols. Shot like that for years without issues. I tend to focus more on my target then my sights though.. If I can keep under fist size at 20ft I'm good with that.

  • @ghostwalkerairsofttech1947
    @ghostwalkerairsofttech1947 Год назад +1

    Kinda makes sense...the rear sight is the closest to your eyes...and easiest to focus on...peripherally it's hard for older eyes to focus on front sight post...I've been shooting iron sights for years and have always used the rear sight...and I shot better that way...now folks are saying front sight post and my shots come nowhere near close..

  • @mortykatz2236
    @mortykatz2236 Год назад +1

    A question? Why is front site shooting wrong? In a defensive situation it’s going to be point shooting- so practice all you can to get muscle memory

  • @MJCorey
    @MJCorey Год назад +4

    This advice works for targets at 10 yards with an X-ring as big as my computer screen. Try 50 yards with a 1.7 inch X-ring as in Bullseye pistol.

  • @omarcaneomedia
    @omarcaneomedia 2 года назад +1

    Something to consider: It looks bad when you have a guest on your show providing insight and you are busy playing with your headphone cord.
    His information was very helpful though!

  • @Aspen7780
    @Aspen7780 3 месяца назад

    I find myself target focused (a specific spot on the target) if I'm under 7 yards to the target and especially when shooting without thinking it out. If I'm conscious of it, I will be front sight focused at those distances but that's unnatural for me and I usually revert to target focused when on autopilot. After 7 yards I find myself automatically and naturally/unconsciously switching to front sight focused. I almost ignore the rear sights in both cases. The three dots have always been very distracting for me and slow me up so now I just black out the dots on the rear sight so that they can disappear and not interfere with my target or front sight focus. That's just me.

  • @greg-judyjones8974
    @greg-judyjones8974 2 года назад +1

    Tim is the man. Great instructor.

  • @thinman8621
    @thinman8621 3 года назад +1

    That there is more than one sight picture approach shouldn't be a surprise to an experienced competition shooter. The front sight focus maybe makes some sense for very new handgun shooters but it's not hard to figure out that you can hit the A zone with no sights at all out to maybe fifteen yards.

  • @antinatalope
    @antinatalope Год назад +1

    I'm of the opinion that if you can point at a target with your finger or a stick, you can shoot the target accurately.

  • @patrickgjorven7832
    @patrickgjorven7832 2 года назад +2

    It's almost like the iron sights manufacturers of good firearms to begin with now almost all use a dot of some sort of their front sight after learning from red dot sights.
    Just check out the transition to red fiber optic before 2000 and into 2022!

  • @kyesims2426
    @kyesims2426 5 месяцев назад

    Line up both sights then focus on the Opp. I've never missed!

  • @juniyananajukyu
    @juniyananajukyu 7 месяцев назад

    I'm experiencing what he spoke about at 5:40. I'm learning to shoot irons more efficiently.

  • @pranc236
    @pranc236 2 года назад

    This actually helped allot when i picked up the red dot.

  • @mattedwards4533
    @mattedwards4533 Год назад

    I see this is an old post but wanted to thank you for showing the right way to get tighter groups. I never cared about pistols very much but was a rifle fan. I do the target focus first peripheral vision for sights. I go one step farther that being that I use the reflection of light on the post to bury it in the receiver till it starts to disappear and just flickers. Then the bullet heads down range. I have shot, from the bench 1 1/2 " groups at 100 yards using the method you described . I tried to tell others how I shoot but they don't get it? What really has me dumbfounded is some shooters using scoped rifles could not shoot a group that tight?

  • @brianshuler6951
    @brianshuler6951 3 года назад +4

    After a few decades of shooting irons and loudly resisting red dots, I an getting my 1st red dot set up this weak. Very curious about how well I am going to adjust to it. I dry fire a lot and intend to use dry fire to learn any needed modifications to my presentation to find and maintain the dot. This video has given me new perspective on to the sighting process that I hope will help. Thanks to you both.

    • @brianshuler6951
      @brianshuler6951 3 года назад +2

      I have gotta proof these things better!

    • @onpsxmember
      @onpsxmember 3 года назад +3

      It'll take some time to adjust but the it'll help. There'll be a phase where you want your old results back right now. Keep going developing that new skill, absorb all the dot shooting videos. Turn the brightness down so that you barely see the dot. What do you get?

    • @brianshuler6951
      @brianshuler6951 3 года назад +2

      @@onpsxmember Thanks for the input. Glad to know about lowering the brightness. I ordered the new Bushnell rxs 100 because of positive reviews, good user feedback, the price,, and the fact that I am still not 100% convinced that I won't go back to irons. Because of your comments, I will stick with it long enough to learn how to use it correctly, then decide if dots are the future for me.

    • @rahimgaymon4243
      @rahimgaymon4243 Год назад +1

      How did it go ? What is your conclusion on a Red Dot?

  • @Immopimmo
    @Immopimmo 2 месяца назад

    Target focus. As long as you maintain a consistent stance, you'll hit what you're looking at.

  • @mrfarts5176
    @mrfarts5176 Год назад

    I bought a cz jaguar with a 28" barrel. I felt like the gun just was all over the place. I put a scope on it and was getting quarter sizes groups at 100 yards with my best ammo. I am so bad with iron sights I felt like I must be doing it wrong, turns out I am. Thanks for the video.

  • @Quality_Guru
    @Quality_Guru 3 года назад +2

    If you wear glasses and are near sighted you can peak over your glasses and see a clear set of irons or look through your glasses and see blurry irons and a clear target. Not sure what is meant by soft target. Is he talking about blurry sights with a strong sight of the target or visa versa. Should you lock into the iron sights first and then transition to target focus. If someone that is nearsighted could explain that would be great. Perhaps I need to look at bifocals. That is why I love red dots.

  • @mr.holgersen
    @mr.holgersen 3 года назад +3

    I’ve tried target focus out to ten yards with a blurry front sight and it didn’t make any difference in accuracy. I don’t shoot bows, but it is my understanding that archers use a target focus even when using a sight. It seems like if your junk is aligned and on target it doesn’t really matter what you’re focusing on.

  • @Neomet010
    @Neomet010 3 года назад +1

    Not just Mark, but some no-name eurotrash shooter Eric Grauffel said he shoots target focus with irons out to about 15 yards or so. BTW, it looks like Mark is shooting up at Prescott there in the action vid!!

  • @tizben
    @tizben 3 года назад

    I listened to the podcast yesterday. But it's nice to have small clips to refer to

  • @PVL14
    @PVL14 Год назад

    BEST sight video ever!!!

  • @wbwills2
    @wbwills2 3 года назад

    Like it. Don’t compete, don’t shoot red dots but I am curious. Taught myself how to shoot before RUclips without reading anything about it. Do pretty good. Good video. thanks

  • @pams2270
    @pams2270 2 года назад

    I agree with his summation. I'm an iron sights shooter, and I'm more accurate with better speed that comes with it.

  • @hawkgeoff
    @hawkgeoff Год назад +1

    Maybe I'm smokin' crack, but I also think that having your focus on the front, or rear sight for that matter, puts a newer shooter's attention at the big scary end where the bang happens and the muzzzle flash happens and contributes to blinking and preignition push/ flinching. Back 15 years ago I discovered that I shot B8s at 20 yards better when I focused on the target and saw the sights with the soft fuzz that happens when not concentrating on the front sight. Made no sense to me at the time, but back then I was also fighting a flinch that seemed to go away when focused on the target. Coulda just been me, but now when teaching I do notice people shoot better when target focused... BUT they do need to be seeing the sights are aligned. Your just not "focused" on them.

  • @MikesChannel1108
    @MikesChannel1108 Год назад

    Before the vid starts.. The way I use iron sights, I put all 3 dots on the target. If I'm aiming for precise, I focus the front sight.
    But for me, 3 dots on center mass, I'm pulling the trigger

  • @jjgriffin3275
    @jjgriffin3275 Год назад

    Davids face from the 2 min mark till the 4 min mark says it all

  • @billmacrae1924
    @billmacrae1924 3 месяца назад

    Look at the target!!! The sights are blurry, but there is a tiny spot in the middle of the blur of the front and the back sight. They can be lined up on the target. That is what I found for myself 60 years ago in the army. Nobody told me about it and I told no one. It was my secret for being a better than average shot.

  • @jeffbroders9781
    @jeffbroders9781 Год назад +6

    I must be a moron! After 20 years in the USMC and another 20+ years of shooting experience, I don't look at my sights at all. 😮 once I get used to a different firearm it's like pointing my finger.

    • @jona5517
      @jona5517 10 месяцев назад +1

      Same

  • @FloridaTwoWheelAdventures
    @FloridaTwoWheelAdventures 4 месяца назад

    Good info. Also, “right” is the “like” of the 21st century.

  • @commandmastacheef
    @commandmastacheef Год назад

    this is true but I think it depends at what range we are shooting at as well. if your shooting close range absolutely... but shooting far away front sight front sight front sight

  • @Baldcurious
    @Baldcurious 3 года назад

    Been doing that pretty much from the start. Use my FO sight as an red dot pretty much.

  • @stevenkennedy4130
    @stevenkennedy4130 3 года назад +1

    I'm a member of Front Sight. Now I feel like I should ask for a refund. ;-) Thanks for the share!!

    • @StuninRub
      @StuninRub 2 года назад

      Don't, it makes you a more accurate shooter in the end. There is a reason why Olympic shooters use it as opposed to this buffoon shill for mall ninja 1911s.

    • @stevenkennedy4130
      @stevenkennedy4130 2 года назад

      @@StuninRub man, that is one harsh reply.