I went to the range today planning on shooting the Kadet then the 97, 60 rounds each, disciplined, structured bullseye practice slow fire, timed fire, rapid fire. I set up a 50 yard target and got the Kadet out and just sprayed rounds all over the backer. Not today for the Kadet. Might need cleaning. If it was me, I wasn't going to waste any .45 ammo if I wasn't up to it myself, so I decided to forego formal bullseye practice and just get in some more trigger time with the P-10C. Even if I were unsteady, I could learn the trigger. Plus I wanted to see how it would do at 50 yards, slow fire, single hand anyway.
With low expectations, I didn't bother to set up any cameras. Instead, I checked the zero, shooting single hand, made some adjustments for a single hand and for a 6 o'clock hold on the bullseye target, and then shot 10 rounds bullseye target. Confirmed the zero was right, marked the first 10 shots, then got serious about actually pulling the trigger without moving the pistol. The results were excellent when I controlled the trigger, same as with a P-07 or even a P-09.
I thought it might be of interest to demonstrate what happens with good trigger control versus what happens when one is lazy and sloppy. Especially without a lot of experience with the firearm.
One thing I confirmed. I can spray bullets with a P-10C just like I can with any of my other pistols. What is cool is that I can shoot really good groups with the striker gun when I don't move the gun as I am releasing the striker. Simple as that. Pistol is excellent, shooter needs work.
This video will finish uploading by 11:40 CDT. It is short, but, to me, pretty sweet.
https://youtu.be/S81_VbPTkckThis is fun. This is not easy.
Joe