Diagnosing Shooting Problems by Breaking Them Into Parts

Published on February 4, 2026
Duration: 11:58

Joel Park, an expert instructor, breaks down common shooting problems into vision and mechanical issues. He emphasizes separating transition problems (vision) from grip/trigger issues (mechanical). The guide provides actionable dry-fire and live-fire drills to improve target transitions and the ability to shoot pairs or doubles accurately, focusing on visual mechanics and controlled grip.

Quick Summary

Expert instructor Joel Park explains that improving shooting transitions involves mastering vision tracking. Focus on looking at the target first, then letting the sights arrive, rather than tracking the sights themselves. Practice this in dry fire and use drills like body-head-body or the MXAD drill to enhance accuracy and speed.

Chapters

  1. 00:00Intro & Listener Question
  2. 00:44Problem Diagnosis: Vision vs. Grip
  3. 02:00Dry Fire Transitions Practice
  4. 03:56Vision Errors to Avoid
  5. 05:59Vertical Transition Drills
  6. 06:41Improving Doubles with MXAD Drill
  7. 08:30Indoor Range Practice Strategies

Frequently Asked Questions

How can I improve my shooting transitions between targets?

Focus on your vision: look at the next target first, then let your sights arrive. Avoid tracking the sights. Practice this in dry fire without pressing the trigger. Vertical transition drills like body-head-body can also help.

What's the difference between improving transitions and improving doubles/pairs?

Transitions are primarily a vision issue – how quickly and accurately you shift your gaze and align your sights. Doubles or pairs are more about mechanical grip and trigger control, ensuring a consistent platform for follow-up shots.

What is the MXAD drill and how does it help?

The MXAD drill involves shooting six close targets and then two farther targets. It helps you practice switching between predictive shooting for close targets and more precise, reactive shooting for distant ones without over-gripping.

What common vision mistake should I avoid during transitions?

A frequent error is tracking the sights as they move. Instead, keep your eyes locked on the target. Allow the sights to naturally enter your field of view and align with the target before firing.

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