Ummm. My drill is to say I'm going to do them and not get the job completed. When I do, I work on draw par times and target transitions. Steve Anderson (?) on drumfire is really a good tool if you can borrow a copy from someone.
Between the Ben Stoeger 15 min plans and the Steve Anderson books, that should keep you plenty busy. The best things to practice in dryfire are draws and reloads. Then you don't have to do them nearly as much in live fire bc you've already worked on the mechanics. Use live fire practice for target transitions, shot calling, shooting on the move, SHO/WHO shooting, etc etc.
At the safe table before the match I do a couple of draws........
Well I don't do it everytime.
I also do some dry fire at the make ready command.
...and Coach is just annoying!
Well I don't do it everytime.
I also do some dry fire at the make ready command.
That's been my approach to dry fire- Cover the mechanics, the non-shooting stuff; draws reloads, etc. I have been practicing the eye-snapping part of target transitions in dry fire as well, based on the BE transition drill part 2. The latter seems to be paying off nicely.
Speaking of which, I need to get some practice in today. I haven't done anything since steel@ACC last weekend.
Dry fire is even more boring than reloading. At least with reloading, occasionally something blows up.
along with most of your stage planning....