caught my own assumption
So now, when you've evaluated whether a gun was a "natural pointer" or "pointed well for you",
were you speaking about a one hand grip or a two hand grip?
I just realized something. During all your discussion I had been visualizing everything mentioned with a
one hand grip on a handgun. Raising up to eye level with one hand. Point shooting with one hand. And it's possible a good number of you have too. Why? For me it's most likely because the first person to mention pointing with a finger to quickly aim did so with one hand.
- this will be interesting to hear if we get some further input.
--some thoughts on the "why" rather than the "what", so slightly off topic---
Interesting to me because
stance may interact with this phenomenon for folks who evaluate "natural pointing" using a 2 hand grip. Weaver stance: less symmetrical than Isosceles but there is a straight arm to help align the general angle of the handgun on the way up to a firing position both visually and by feel. - that's if this 2 hand shooter takes the definition of "natural pointing" to include sight alignment. The straight arm would contrast with seeing the muzzle of a gun deviated to the left or right and feeling the wrist bent. By the time sight picture is attained, the gun is generally pointed in the right direction. Maybe an better example would be the old 1 handed bullseye shooting before Weaver came along. The whole body was to aid in alignment.
Isosceles is a bit more symmetrical but if understand the nature of the stance, requires both wrists to be bent, extended towards the back of the hand. There is no straight arm to visually index, but there is the flat line of the top of the gun on the way to a firing position which would also help tremendously.
-this doesn't take into account previous training though, just some thoughts about stance itself.
Some speculation for aiming on the horizontal axis:
Perhaps barrel length also contributes to whether or not we perceive a gun is a "natural pointer" How?
- shorter barrels may appear to be more forgiving in aligning the front sight between the rear notch/dots. A wider variation of bend in the wrist would still allow for a sight picture that's relatively "on target". This is if we use the definition of "natural pointer" to include sight picture.
I wonder, do the guns you've felt were "natural pointers" typically have short or longer sight radiuses? (radii?) Or a variety?
- If we use the definition to mean "a gun that point-shoots well for me": Longer barrels on the other hand may aid in aligning the top of the gun to the target and we'd find that shots were placed closer to where we intended. And then we'd declare the gun to be a natural pointer. Do point shooters find that the "natural pointers" typically have longer barrels?
These speculations on barrel length might be wrong and they don't take into account previous training. I bet someone who's point-shot shot snubbies their whole life could out point-shoot someone who just started with a Desert Eagle.
I may edit the first post to just include a quick list of issues that we've touched on.
Smince -
note that your hand is canted in a 'half homey' position.
- yeah, I point like that too. Right hand pronated/turned inward to about 45 degrees counter-clockwise. I saw a pistol shooting instruction video on Ruger's youtube site that spoke about this. Whatever that instructor's name was he said
when shooting 1 handed, some choose to allow their arm to pronate comfortably or they force themselves to have a strictly vertical grip. Both seem to work out fine with practice. Previously I had only heard of canting the firearm when shooting single-handedly with the weak hand so the sights could more easily be in line with the dominant eye.
I submit there is no such thing as a 'natural pointing' handgun and it is a software problem that has to be learned.
- there seems to be a lot more to this term than I thought. I guess we all come in with assumptions about what it means or what the person we're talking to means. It's fun exploring all the "what" and "why"
John - Ha! that's interesting to know. So history at one time might have given popular credibility to the phrase "natural pointing gun" due to how popular/available a gun type was. If the majority of people had training with a type of firearm then the same majority would agree that a newer design was or wasn't a "natural pointer" for them. It seems like the evolution of shooting styles most likely also affected the use of the term too - from one handed shooting of single-action revolvers and 1911's to two handed grips. I like your set-up for that experiment to remove some variables. If it could happen and we're talking about point-shooting, my wild guess for the most natural point-shooter would be that strange "squeeze gun" that fits in the palm of your hand if there could only be a way to ensure a consistent grip. Trajectory is in line with the bones of the forearm.
Tangent again: It's strange - when we point to something to show someone where an object is, our arm 1) shoots out straight from the shoulder or 2) we index it with our line of sight by overlapping or underlining the object in our own field of view. Well at least I do. But when I use method 2), the direction of my outstretched arm is actually no longer headed towards the object. Only a point from my eyeball to the fingertip is. And then I expect someone else to look at my arm and they'll try to mentally draw a line to our target. People are crazy