Paladin wrote: Sun Apr 02, 2023 9:10 pm
Airguns are affordable, convenient, and can potentially provided training that is difficult or even impossible to do with actual firearms. I shoot my firearms a lot, but my airguns even more.

I have a decent pellet rifle that I got for
much cheaper than live-fire practice for trigger control, follow-through, breathing, etc. And I figure it could come in handy, should the need ever arise, for squirrel/rabbit size game. But what I shoot the most now is AirSoft pistols. Not the same as live-fire drills, but like Paladin notes you can do a bunch of stuff with AirSoft that you can't do at the range, especially since many ranges don't allow draw-from-holster and rapid fire unless you're shooting a match. You can do 360° practice as well as--with a partner and some protection--some simple force-on-force.
Most of what I do is in the garage. I have a few IDPA cardboard targets on adjustable stands that I can quickly move around (can take 'em out to the backyard easily, too). I cut out the down-zero circles and stapled some loose mesh cloth in back to make a pellet catch netting. The pellets don't get damaged at all that way and can be reused, plus there's less to sweep up after. Though I always do some sweeping because I'm nowhere near good enough to go quickly and still put everything into down-zero even at under 5 yards.
AirSoft pistol, carry holster, targets, and a shot timer. Even squeezing in an hour every once in a while helps keep most of the basics sharp, at least for me I
think it does. Biggest things I miss are actual full weight and size mag changes, stoppage drills, and of course real recoil management.