Quote:
Originally Posted by Chris Travinski
It must be used as a reference for mounting the gun. I can honestly say I give zero thought to the beads when I'm shooting, if you're looing at the bead(s) you're probably not looking at the target. I do however use the front and middle beads to get a feel for mounting the gun, when the front and mid beads are stacked I know everything is where it needs to be.
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I agree. If looking at bead, then your aiming. When aiming, at least for me, I have tendency stop swinging gun effectively. Also I am not a big hand gun guy, as a matter of factor don't even own one, but have shot enough to learn sight picture. The old mantra of when "In a fight, front sight". Which means sight picture is focused on front sight for aiming purposes making rear sights and general target area blurry. Human eyes cannot focus very well on more than one item. The good shot-gunners I know always focus on something very small on the moving target, meaning that any sight on gun has to be either blurry or unnoticeable. Maybe an optic front bead may help as long as eye control is fixed on target, but don't have alot of experience with it. Besides if someone would put one of those on a Parker or old sxs, that might be a tar and feathering offense.