by Steve » Sat Sep 04, 2010 10:05 am
It's a practiced skillset.
Does your optic have a flip-up front dust cover? (I can see the rear, but not the front in the picture). If it does, turn your optic on, and then close the dust cover in the front. Practice keeping both eyes open and putting the dot on the target with the dust cover down (red dot, black background through the optic). Your brain will superimpose the dot on the target by including data from your non-dominant eye. Practice like this for a while. Then try it with the cover flipped up and see if it helped. Then repeat for hours on end. Do this until you can keep both eyes open while putting the dot onto your target with the target in focus and the dot a bit fuzzy.
Once you are a little more comfortable lining up on targets this way, start practicing shooting positions. Take a good stance, bring the weapon up and focus through the optic on the target. Then let your eyes widen out to where the red dot is sort of fuzzy, the target is clear, and both eyes are open. Hold this position and remember what it feels like to be in this position. Take a bunch of time to do it right. Then, lower the replica and relax. Slowly (and I mean glacially slowly) assume a good shooting position again. Concentrate on how it feels as the weapon comes up. Keep looking at the target. Bring your primary up to your shoulder and bring the optic into your field of view. Keep both eyes open and focused on the target and drag the sight to you rather than trying to look through the sight at the target. Repeat this, a lot, over the course of multiple days. You want to do this slowly rather than quickly because you are trying to build muscle memory. It is better to spend 4x as long building the muscle memory than it is to build a bad habit that you will have to train yourself out of later. Concentrate on doing it right, and as slowly as you can possibly do it. Fast comes later. Much later. Also, slowly builds muscles better. Useable muscles, anyway. Fast reps at high speed builds mass, but low speeds held builds endurance. And being able to do something once is neat and all, but being able to do the same thing for 7 hours straight is more of what you are looking for with this (probably, anyway)
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