Most powder burning handgun shooters know (or have heard) about proper hand hold and good shooting form for best accuracy and consistency. Bad or inconsistent hand holds will result in wide groups, POI not where desired, and even missing the target. Glock shooters especially have trouble with this. All of this applies equally to air pistols. In fact longer dwell times make hand hold form even more important. Where to rest each hand makes a big difference in where the pellet lands.
There have been many articles and even books published describing the factors of proper hold so I won't discuss here. Look up books or articles on pistol target shooting. I have been guilty of forgetting the principles when I switched from powder burner pistols to air pistols and only recently "rediscovered" them. Casual hand holds might sometimes get "tight" groups at common pistol shooting distances of 7-10 yards, but to get truly tight groups even at these close distances requires good holding discipline.
The Following pictures were taken after I "rediscovered" my proper handhold for pistol shooting. I don't always get groups like this, but then I didn't always get good groups when shooting powder burners in NRA Bullseye, either.
There have been many articles and even books published describing the factors of proper hold so I won't discuss here. Look up books or articles on pistol target shooting. I have been guilty of forgetting the principles when I switched from powder burner pistols to air pistols and only recently "rediscovered" them. Casual hand holds might sometimes get "tight" groups at common pistol shooting distances of 7-10 yards, but to get truly tight groups even at these close distances requires good holding discipline.
The Following pictures were taken after I "rediscovered" my proper handhold for pistol shooting. I don't always get groups like this, but then I didn't always get good groups when shooting powder burners in NRA Bullseye, either.