thank you
Posted: Thu Aug 08, 2013 1:07 pm
I am thrilled to get all of this great information. Thanks to all for your help!!!
Paula
Paula
A forum to talk about Olympic style shooting, rifle or pistol, 10 meters to 50 meters, and whatever is in between. Hosted by Pilkguns.com
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There are degrees of dominance such that some people are almost equi dominant, whilst others have a big difference. In reality you can only test it by trying to see if you can succesfully shoot with the non-dominant eye. A blinder over the non-shooting eye helps but for some people that's still not enough.adair wrote:How common is it for world-class shooters to use their dominant hand and weak eye? The only one I know of is Iceland's Asgeir Sigurgeirsson who is right-hand/left-eye dominant but uses his right eye for shooting. Does anyone know of other shooters like this?
With both eyes open, hold an arm out and point at something 15-20ft away.conradin wrote:Is there a basic test to figure out which one is the dominant eye?
How did you determine I was left eye dominant the moment I walked into the club for the very first time and tried out a pistol for the first time? I remember you hold a card over one eye, then tell me to look at something (your finger?); then move the card to the other eye, and tell e to look at the same thing.bummer7 wrote:Vince,conradin wrote:Is there a basic test to figure out which one is the dominant eye?
Try this. Using both your hands at a 45 degree slope, form a diamond .......diamond shaped opening in front of you?
-s
I think my right eye is badly in need of prescription because if I use a finger pointing method, I was never quite sure if I point to an object correctly. Inevitably after trying your method, when I have both eyes open again after the testing, I was not even looking straight at my fingers. I was already "off".David Levene wrote:With both eyes open, hold an arm out and point at something 15-20ft away.conradin wrote:Is there a basic test to figure out which one is the dominant eye?
Close one eye. Open it. Close the other eye. Open it.
When you closed one of your eyes you will probably have noticed that you finger moved away from the object you were pointing at more than when you closed the other eye.
The eye that produced the most movement when you shut it is your dominant eye (if you have one).
I should have made clear that you are looking at the distant object, not your finger. The finger is just a "ghost" in the middle.conradin wrote:I think my right eye is badly in need of prescription because if I use a finger pointing method, I was never quite sure if I point to an object correctly. Inevitably after trying your method, when I have both eyes open again after the testing, I was not even looking straight at my fingers. I was already "off".David Levene wrote:With both eyes open, hold an arm out and point at something 15-20ft away.conradin wrote:Is there a basic test to figure out which one is the dominant eye?
Close one eye. Open it. Close the other eye. Open it.
When you closed one of your eyes you will probably have noticed that you finger moved away from the object you were pointing at more than when you closed the other eye.
The eye that produced the most movement when you shut it is your dominant eye (if you have one).
Vince,Tried to use left eye and right hand initially for the first week, not getting anywhere. Then switch to right hand right eye, and things at least seem to make some sense.
Right now if I use a long arm, it is almost impossible for me to be right handed. I don't know whether it is due to eye domination, or that my right eye needs major prescription. My left eye is crystal clear when it comes to long sight radius.
OK, I use my finger and point to a distance object, some 500 yard away, neighbor's telephone pole; as if the finger is the front sight, the telephone pole is the target. Both eyes can see and concentrate on the pole using the finger. Then right eye closed, left eye has no problem; left eye closed, right eye is totally off.David Levene wrote:I should have made clear that you are looking at the distant object, not your finger. The finger is just a "ghost" in the middle.conradin wrote:I think my right eye is badly in need of prescription because if I use a finger pointing method, I was never quite sure if I point to an object correctly. Inevitably after trying your method, when I have both eyes open again after the testing, I was not even looking straight at my fingers. I was already "off".David Levene wrote:With both eyes open, hold an arm out and point at something 15-20ft away.conradin wrote:Is there a basic test to figure out which one is the dominant eye?
Close one eye. Open it. Close the other eye. Open it.
When you closed one of your eyes you will probably have noticed that you finger moved away from the object you were pointing at more than when you closed the other eye.
The eye that produced the most movement when you shut it is your dominant eye (if you have one).
This won't work if you badly need a prescription lens but are not wearing it. That would be like trying to work out which hand you can punch harder with, whilst having one arm tied behind your back.
Forget any comparison to pistol shooting; imagine it is real life.conradin wrote:OK, I use my finger and point to a distance object, some 500 yard away, neighbor's telephone pole; as if the finger is the front sight, the telephone pole is the target. Both eyes can see and concentrate on the pole using the finger. Then right eye closed, left eye has no problem; left eye closed, right eye is totally off.
OK. Go it. Did this again with your careful instruction now. Right eye open, nothing changes, left eye open finger ended up pointing right of pole quite a bit. Right eye dominant then?David Levene wrote:Forget any comparison to pistol shooting; imagine it is real life.
Look at the pole with both eyes open. Raise your arm so that your finger is pointing at it, but still looking at the pole.
I think you are saying that when you close you right eye the finger is still pointing at the pole, but when you close your left eye the finger is pointing to the left of the pole.
If that is the case then you are left eye dominant.
Correctconradin wrote:OK. Go it. Did this again with your careful instruction now. Right eye open, nothing changes, left eye open finger ended up pointing right of pole quite a bit. Right eye dominant then?David Levene wrote:Forget any comparison to pistol shooting; imagine it is real life.
Look at the pole with both eyes open. Raise your arm so that your finger is pointing at it, but still looking at the pole.
I think you are saying that when you close you right eye the finger is still pointing at the pole, but when you close your left eye the finger is pointing to the left of the pole.
If that is the case then you are left eye dominant.
Correct. I'm wondering just where the best place is to locate the focal point of the lens so that the front sight is relatively crisply focused but the target is not wiped into a total blur. I would think that the point will vary along with the strength(?) of the prescription depending on the distance of the event to the target.Rover wrote:Wrong!
Whether you shoot right or left, you probably still need a lens that pulls the focus of your eye to the front sight. It can be added to a prescription that corrects astigmatism or other errors.