Well something just clicked, while I have been working with a timer the whole idea setting a par time was beyond me.
Par times help.
Two topics for comment regarding dryfire practice for improvement:
1) If you are going to actually try to use dryfire to make yourself better, you should
start by sitting down and making a
plan. What skills do you want to improve? List them.
Then, think of straightforward drills to practice/improve that skill---and find yourself a par time for each drill. (Meaning, set your par timer at about what you think you can do for that drill, and try it. If it doesn't work, change the par time. Keeping working at it until you find the time in which you can complete the drill correctly about 90% of the time. Write down that par time.)
Only THEN should you start actually working on getting better.
You need that par time to give you a starting point---and to give you something to push. Every couple of weeks, review your par time. Is it still correct? Or have you improved enough so that it is too easy, and the time should be reduced? Did you start with a 2.5 draw on a 7-yard target, and now you can consistently make it at the 0.2-under-par time? If so, move your par down to 2.3, and drill some more. After some time, check it again. Shift your par times as you get better.
2) Dryfire is great, but there are a couple of standard issues that crop up for people unless they are very careful, and very honest with themselves. Watch out for these!
A) In the name of speed, people often sacrifice their grip. In other words, trying for that incredibly fast draw you just grab the gun, rip it out of the holster, and pull the trigger---but your initial grip on the pistol wasn't any good, your support hand didn't make it into the right spot, and your grip itself was weak. As such, your ability to control the firearm and perform anything resembling a decent followup shot is just about zero. So make sure you get a perfect grip on the gun. Don't train poor technique.
B) In the name of speed, people often mash that trigger as fast as they can--which, as we know, is probably the main reason that people miss. Even if you took the time to get the sights on target (which, at speed, some people get sloppy with), hammering the trigger will most often pull the sights off target, and you'll miss. Practice
perfect trigger control. (This is why you should do the wall drill every time. If you don't do ANYTHING else, do the wall drill. A better trigger press helps everything.)
C) In the name of speed, people start being less than honest with themselves about whether or not their shot would have been any good. And you
can't afford that. You have to have the discipline such that each time you press the trigger, your sights were in alignment on the target where they needed to be, and the trigger press was good enough that it didn't move the sights off target, and your grip and stance were such that you were stable enough to make the shot and have enough recoil control to take followup shots.
Sometimes people work so hard on beating their par times that they aren't paying attention to the sights--they just wave the gun towards the target, pull the trigger, and are all happy with themselves that they beat the par time.
Oddly enough, this doesn't help.
You DO want to push yourself---to get faster. However, it only counts when you also get BETTER while you get faster. So speed is one component---but you'll often find that improving the precision of your technique (and taking out wasted movement) is one the best ways to reduce your time.
As some point in time, you'll just have to start moving faster. But you should only be doing that while you are still doing it RIGHT.
Yes, you'll make mistakes. Pushing will cause that to happen, and that's fine. But you have to continually push yourself to be honest with your technique--to correctly judge whether or not your motions would have resulted in a hit, or not.
There are several ways around this--one is periodically making a video of your practice, to check your form. Another is to get some sort of laser trainer like a SIRT pistol or a Laserlyte insert. (The new software being advertised here on the NFOA forum may really help this also, if you have trouble observing your hits with a laser-assist. Effectively, it takes the place of a par timer and a video camera, and lets you see your shooting in real time as opposed to watching the video later.) Maybe even work with a partner, if possible.
Be honest with yourself! If you do, your practice will make a significant difference to your skill.
(And yes, you can always also get instruction. That'll help, too.
)
Oh---the drills at pistol-training.com are good ones. Todd Louis Green has a lot of good stuff there. His Wall Drill is one version, and there are others around the web that you can find.
Not all live-fire drills work well as dryfire drills, but many certainly can. You can either come up with your own drills, find various ones on the internet, or just get the two books I referenced in a prior post.