Bill Jordan survived innumerable gunfights on the Texas/Mexican border and went on in his later years to be a demonstration shooter for Colt and Smith & Wesson. He taught point shooting up close and aiming further out. As a demo of his point shooting he had a horizontal target board on which he had glued 6 discs cut from a Cedar approximately 2 inches in diameter. He would draw and shoot from the hip at close range (I don't know the precise distance but it was likely around 12-15 feet.) and center-punch all 6.
Then he would put up another board with 6 Necco wafers and bust them with the next 6 rounds. Finally he would put up a third board, this time with 6 aspirin tablets and blow them through the board. After a while he decided that was getting stale and would bore his audiences so he added a fourth board, this one with Saccharin tablets. All of these were shot with his weapon held at waist height. Good enough for me.
Elmer Keith could snipe targets at 100 yards with a revolver. He used the sights and sometimes a rest. Also good enough for me.
Ed McGivern regularly shot thrown aerial targets with a revolver. He claimed he used the sights. He also regularly grouped a wheel full of rounds into a target area smaller than a playing card at 12-15 feet in incredibly short times, also using the sights. Once again, good enough for me.
I was once privileged to hear Sgt William Blankenship's response when he was asked the secret of his phenomenal skill by a reporter. Bill Blankenship was the All-Army Pistol Champion for several years running. His answer was - as close as I can remember it - "There's no secret. All you need to do is acquire a proper sight picture and cause the pistol to fire without disturbing it. The rest is practice."
All of these are valid techniques. I've tried them all and had success with all of them at different times, although I never got very good at aerial work. I was taught as a boy not to fire into the air at random, and I think that affects my reflexes. I have a box of awards somewhere in storage that came from competition shooting, and once I hit a running jackrabbit in the head, shooting while standing in the back of a moving pickup down a gravel ranch road on the Texas/New Mexico border -- with an unaimed snap shot from a revolver held at waist/chest level. We won't talk about the many, many shots - aimed and otherwise - that I've missed.
Long story. My apologies, but there's my experience for what it's worth. I'm of the opinion that it really comes down to what Bill Blankenship said --- "practice."
Then he would put up another board with 6 Necco wafers and bust them with the next 6 rounds. Finally he would put up a third board, this time with 6 aspirin tablets and blow them through the board. After a while he decided that was getting stale and would bore his audiences so he added a fourth board, this one with Saccharin tablets. All of these were shot with his weapon held at waist height. Good enough for me.
Elmer Keith could snipe targets at 100 yards with a revolver. He used the sights and sometimes a rest. Also good enough for me.
Ed McGivern regularly shot thrown aerial targets with a revolver. He claimed he used the sights. He also regularly grouped a wheel full of rounds into a target area smaller than a playing card at 12-15 feet in incredibly short times, also using the sights. Once again, good enough for me.
I was once privileged to hear Sgt William Blankenship's response when he was asked the secret of his phenomenal skill by a reporter. Bill Blankenship was the All-Army Pistol Champion for several years running. His answer was - as close as I can remember it - "There's no secret. All you need to do is acquire a proper sight picture and cause the pistol to fire without disturbing it. The rest is practice."
All of these are valid techniques. I've tried them all and had success with all of them at different times, although I never got very good at aerial work. I was taught as a boy not to fire into the air at random, and I think that affects my reflexes. I have a box of awards somewhere in storage that came from competition shooting, and once I hit a running jackrabbit in the head, shooting while standing in the back of a moving pickup down a gravel ranch road on the Texas/New Mexico border -- with an unaimed snap shot from a revolver held at waist/chest level. We won't talk about the many, many shots - aimed and otherwise - that I've missed.
Long story. My apologies, but there's my experience for what it's worth. I'm of the opinion that it really comes down to what Bill Blankenship said --- "practice."