watchman
Well-known member
Hi jake well shot today mate, shame about the final ha ha
Well that's the rules now+dodgy computer sequence! still won the selection shoot with an MCS so happy enough, but thanks for reminding meHi jake well shot today mate, shame about the final ha ha
It is with this view in mind I was thinking of one, I think the DryFire is well over priced for what it is though, plus they want an other £250.00 on top if you want the canvas background print,( bit pointless without tbh) the Arrow system gives you more or less the same practise regime for half the price, and you don't have to hitch it up to a computer , thats always been a recipe for disaster with me that has :laugh: (I once bought a JamVox, it now lives in its box on top of the wardrobe :angry: ) still, you have the DryFire and seem happy with it, thats the important thing.I have the Dryfire system and can say it is very good as a training system. In no way would I say that it could replace proper shooting - boredom would set in very quickly, but as a training system, it is excellent.
I use it to work on what ever shots are troubling me at any given time (I mainly do sporting so it's usually all of them!)and it does really help but given the time, money and opportunity I would always rather shoot the real thing.
Yeah, I know what your saying, its just that they have made it far to expensive than they needed too, I would have to make a huge compromise on what gun I buy to get one of those. All the add ons are also ridiculously expensive :money: pity, because it looks like a really good practise product.I'm sure the Arrow system is good and it's certainly much more affordable but it cannot be compared with Dryfire. It doesn't simulate the same target types and it doesn't help you truly learn the lead and sight pictures. It is designed more to check gun fit and allow you practice tracking moving targets.
You don't need to buy the background for the Dryfire, it works well without it. I do agree though, you need fairly deep pockets to contemplate one. It doesn't replace good instruction but it does help to reduce the amount of live practice and the associated costs.
I should say, I have no association with Dryfire, I'm just happy with the product and in my case at least find it has paid for itself by reducing the amount of live practice I feel the need to do.
Cheeky Monkey (albeit a rhesus sized monkey)Laser Clay Shooting is to shotgun sports what Matt Rurtherford is to Slimming World.
Very nice, but not the Real deal.
( Love you really Matt! Are you George & Kate's love child?)
mine were £18.00 per lesson....but we did it through a group deal at work, someone had contacts :wink:
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