Który jest tak aby przekazać plecami do kurii roku życia counter-acting trigger pressure. Teacupping was actually still featured as acceptable technique the pistol marksmanship FM they released the 1990s. That's despite the fact that we've known through scientific analysis since the 1970s provides almost no support hand advantage it's almost as weak a grip as the one handed duelist stance, and it adds any unintended movement of the weak hand or arm as another failure source, you ;t even have the slow fire accuracy bonus a proper one handed stance can give you. Teacupping literally gives you the worst of both worlds, between two handed shooting control and speed and one handed precision. Crossed thumbs has NEVER been considered acceptable form for a semiautomatic pistol if you have room to cross your thumbs over the back of the grip without sacrificing blood and flesh on the altar of the Slide God, your grip is WAY too low. FM proves that you are wrong. You need to actually look at the Field Manuals. They clearly show the Fist Grip, the Palm Supported Grip and the Weaver Grip the first picture the shooter is not crossing his thumbs behind the slide. Sorry, but people actually have been trained this way and it actually does work the field. other words. crossed thumbs have been considered acceptable form for a semiauto pistol. Even the Palm Supported…science or no science. One handed has its uses and they're decently likely to come up if a desk worker needs to shoot. Tea cup doesn't have any advantage over actually gripping the gun. You just have to be a PT nut to get into those fancy schools. They only care about physical fitness and staying awake for periods of time. Advanced shooting skills are not required, you just have to look good uniform and follow orders. We have a department who used to be a scout sniper the Army and he is one of our worst shooters. Some of those shooters appear to be using revolver grip, some appear to be using some version of the Ayoob crush grip. The only ones I have a problem with are the who's teacupping and the who's crossing his thumbs. First is just useless and the second is more suited for a revolver. I know the new trend is the competition derived high thumbs thumbs up grip, but that's a relatively new concept. The guys with their thumbs forward but a bit lower on frame are Not the real word. Not everyone the world is born to be a pistolero like the denizens of TFB. fact, thousands of folks have qualified on the M9 using the Weaver Grip and the Palm Supported. And, they have gone on to qualify on the practical pistol courses military service and at FLETC. they are not useless practice only with the shooting snobs that often come out with the only one way to do this nonsense with no actual reasons behind it. The reason behind proper grip is minimizing bbl rise on recoil and rapidly getting back on target. Those new pistols have the radiused and stippled trigger guards specifically intended to enable the user to grasp it with the off hand's index finger, adding control. If you are issued a tool that some day save your life, and you're satisfied with barley qualifying with it, you are short changing yourself and your squad mates. YMMV Stippled trigger guards are meant to be placed against a surface to provide a more stable platform. Your support hand pointing finger is not supposed to be on the trigger guard. That's as wrong as having your trigger finger on it with all the safety issues that accompany it. Sorry, you're dead wrong. Pistols are defensive weapons, usually used when a gun isn't handy.They are not normally deployed from a barricaded position or cover, unless you are a law enforcement situation. Your support hand's finger is most certainly intended to provide added stability and you should always shoot with both hands on the pistol barring exigent circumstances. If you look at the last two photos above, the shooters left hand should be slid froward and up the left index finger engages the leading edge of that trigger guard, exerting a stabilizing force directly back line with the right arm. His right thumb should be alongside the slide pointing towards the target and resting atop the left thumb. Neither thumb should be exerting any pressure on the weapon. The last three fingers of the left hand should be covering the lower three fingers of the right hand. Lateral force is to be eliminated and barrel rise minimized When shooting a rapid fire string, the trigger finger should only move with sufficient travel to discharge the weapon, move forward limiting over travel and only enough to reset the trigger, then re-engage if necessary. No need to thank me, you're welcome. If you're a shooter, stay safe. Train like you fight. I wouldn't thank anyone for incorrect info. You are misinformed. The support hand pointing finger is not supposed to be on the trigger guard. It is a safety issue and is currently taught that way by the overwhelming majority of professionals. Do some research.