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You may want to try this in the discussions page, not new member introduction. That said, I haven't used Mantis, but 5 min a day of dry fire was the best thing I ever did for my pistol shooting. If it allows you to do that and get quantifiable data points to track improvement, then it will work if you put in the effort.I really like the convenience and setup. So far, the app and laser round has helped with my aiming but I haven't gone to a live fire range yet to see the results. Can anyone else provide any feedback if this kit actually worked? Thanks!
That'll get you conditioned to the cacophony of gunfire anyways, so……I find that the hungry hungry hippo serves my purposes nicely.
Welcome to the site!
Hey, if that's good enough for British Bobbies, it's good enough for YOU!I considered the Mantis system but a lot of good, fast, accurate shooting is a result of proper muscle memory. The Mantis system requires the shooter to reset the pistol after every trigger pull, right? Just imagine needing that pistol in a hurry and firing one shot, then resetting the pistol from memory because that's what you did thousands of times in your living room.
I considered the Mantis system but a lot of good, fast, accurate shooting is a result of proper muscle memory. The Mantis system requires the shooter to reset the pistol after every trigger pull, right? Just imagine needing that pistol in a hurry and firing one shot, then resetting the pistol from memory because that's what you did thousands of times in your living room.
This is true of the "dry fire" sessions that allow you to work on your aim, hold and trigger pull along with other things like holster draw analysis, etc. This will aid in your "live fire" sessions with the Mantis system to further analyze your abilities and provide feedback. The "live fire" mode with it will indicate if you're improving during "dry fire" training sessions. I don't believe that practicing with having to rack the slide after each trigger pull creates such a learned habit that switching to the real firing will result in me pulling the trigger, sending a bullet and then reaching up to eject a round.I considered the Mantis system but a lot of good, fast, accurate shooting is a result of proper muscle memory. The Mantis system requires the shooter to reset the pistol after every trigger pull, right? Just imagine needing that pistol in a hurry and firing one shot, then resetting the pistol from memory because that's what you did thousands of times in your living room.