I agree 100%!BobCat wrote:
You might want to try something - sounds silly, but do not look at the target. Focus on the front sight; let the bullseye blur if it wants to. Admire how crisp and sharp the top and edges of your front sight are, how well centered in the rear notch the crisp, clear front blade is, and how even with the top of the notch the perfectly focussed front sight is - and actuate the trigger without disturbing the sight.
This is how I've been trying to train. The above mentioned sighting procedure combined with the proper grip and hold produce the best groups, slow fire or double taps, for me anyways. I'm trying to train this way every trip to the range, but I find that I still have to remind myself to focus on the front sight. I've read somewhere that while shooting the only thought going through your mind should be "front sight, trigger, front sight, trigger, front sight, trigger", this is what I practice and it has improved my shooting.
JLaw.