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Training Fundamentals Series — Part 5
At Valiance Firearms Training (VFT), we teach a simple principle:
Vision drives the gun.
Where the eyes go, the gun follows.
This becomes especially important during target transitions. The speed and efficiency of a transition is not determined solely by how fast the gun moves; it is heavily influenced by how efficiently the shooter sees.
At VFT, we commonly see three visual issues during transitions. Two are obvious and easy to identify. The third is more subtle, and often the biggest limiter.
The Problem We Commonly See
The first issue is shooters keeping their eyes focused on the dot during transitions. This creates two major problems.
First, it slows the transition because the shooter is visually dragging the dot target-to-target instead of allowing the eyes to rapidly move ahead.
Second, it creates tunnel vision.
In practical shooting, it is critical that the shooter remains visually aware of the entire scene rather than hyper-fixating on the dot itself. The eyes should process the environment, drive to the next target, and allow the dot to arrive there.
The second issue is leading with the gun instead of the eyes.
This is essentially guessing.
The shooter swings the gun toward the next target and attempts to stop where they believe the target should be. Most of the time, this leads to an adjustment after arrival because the gun did not stop exactly where it needed to.
That correction costs time and consistency.
The eyes should always arrive first, so the gun has a visual destination to drive toward. But the issue we most commonly see is less obvious:
Lingering eyes.
The shot breaks on the first target, but the eyes remain visually attached to that original point of aim for too long.
Because vision drives the gun, the gun naturally follows the eyes right back into alignment on the first target, as if preparing to fire an unnecessary additional shot.
That extra confirmation is wasted movement.
An old phrase often taught is that there should be “two sight pictures for every shot.” In practical shooting, that mindset often becomes inefficient. As the final shot breaks on the first target, the eyes should already be driving to the next target, allowing the gun to naturally follow during recoil.
Instead of settling back onto the original target, the final recoil cycle should help carry the gun into the next transition.
That is where efficiency begins.
The Tip: Fast, Precise Eyes
At VFT, we teach shooters to transition with fast, precise eyes.
Fast vision means rapidly driving the eyes target-to-target without hesitation.
Precise vision means driving the eyes to a specific visual point rather than a general target area.
The eyes should not simply move to an A-zone.
They should lock onto a specific point within the A-zone where the shooter intends to place the shot.
That precision matters.
Fast vision without precision becomes careless.
Precision without speed becomes slow.
High-level shooting requires both.
The goal is for the eyes to instantly leave the current point of aim, aggressively snap to the next visual point, and allow the gun to arrive there naturally.
When done correctly, transitions stop feeling segmented and begin feeling connected. The shooter is no longer steering the gun target-to-target.
They are visually directing it.
Vision and Trigger Timing
Vision also determines when the gun should fire again.
The gun should not fire simply because the shooter wants another shot. It should fire because the eyes have confirmed an acceptable sight picture.
This is why strong grip and proper trigger control matter so much. A flatter shooting gun with minimal unnecessary movement allows the eyes to process information more efficiently.
Everything works together:
• Grip manages recoil
• Trigger control minimizes movement
• Vision directs the gun
The shooter is no longer guessing.
They are seeing, confirming, and responding.

Drill Highlight: Back to the Blake Drill
Back to the Blake Drill.
Three targets.
Six rounds.
One consistent cadence.
As discussed in Part 4, the goal is to maintain nearly the same rhythm as a standard Bill Drill despite the added transitions.
But this is where the visual component becomes obvious.
To perform the drill well, the shooter must rapidly and precisely drive the eyes target-to-target while maintaining visual accountability before each shot breaks.
If the eyes linger, transitions slow down immediately.
If the shooter tracks the dot instead of leading visually, cadence breaks down. If the gun leads the eyes, unnecessary corrections appear at every target.
But when vision leads efficiently, the cadence sounds nearly identical to shooting a single target.
The transitions become smooth, connected, and efficient.
That is vision driving the gun.
The Bigger Picture
High-level shooting is not just about moving quickly.
It is about processing visual information efficiently and responding with control. That takes repetition.
Dry fire builds visual discipline.
Live fire confirms it.
Having ammo available and ready removes friction from training and allows you to spend more time refining these skills. Ammo Squared makes it easy to stay stocked so your training sessions are always ready to execute.
Stack your ammo.
Train with intent.
Repeat the process.
Because the shooter who sees faster and sees more precisely will almost always outperform the shooter who simply tries to move faster.
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6 Comments
Solid analysis. Will be watching this space.
This is very helpful information. Appreciate the detailed analysis.
Great insights on Defense. Thanks for sharing!
Good point. Watching closely.
Interesting update on Vision: Driving the Gun with Your Eyes. Looking forward to seeing how this develops.
I’ve been following this closely. Good to see the latest updates.