A friend of mine that had just recently purchased his very first handgun (had never fired any handgun before) called me up to tell me he thinks there might be something wrong with the gun he bought after his "friends" let him use their private shooting range behind their house to go practice with it.
Now, back when he told me he had just bought a gun, I told him to come over so I could go over the basic firearm safety rules with him, inspect his gun, and let him use my target area out back to train on. I also told him he would be well advised to spend the money and go get some proper training.
Anyway, he obviously never did this, and now he is calling me to tell me that his friends took him out to their range, showed him where to stand and where to put the targets, then left him there to practice. Again, this guy doesn't even know the 4 basic safety rules at this point, let alone how to properly and safely fire his weapon. I asked him why if he wasn't going to go take a class didn't he at least come over and let me help him, and he said it was because he knows I have been busy lately.
So, I ask him why he thinks there is something wrong, and he says that out of 200 rounds he fired at the same target, he hit it only 18 times. I asked if he meant he hit the center 18 times, and he said no, he only hit the paper 18 times.
Well, to make a long story short, I figured out over the phone that he thought he had purchased a Smith and Wesson .40 DA/SA, when he actually purchased some funky old off brand DAO pistol. (It said .40 S&W on it.) On top of that, his friends had told him to practice from 30 YARDS OUT!
So here this brand new shooter is, standing 30 yards away from a paper target, trying to hit it off hand with a DAO .40 cal. pistol. Unbelievable.
PLEASE, get some proper training if you are new to firearms before you end up having a really bad experience. At least my friend got off with only wasting a couple boxes of ammo, and not ending up hurting himself or someone else. I'm glad he called me, because he was going to take his girlfriend and his folks back out the next time he went to teach them how to shoot.