dustyvarmint
10-01-2013, 10:02 AM
I've been running Ben Stoeger's Close 90 Dry-Fire in my dry fire program. http://benstoeger.com/joomla30/index.php/dry-fire-training-program/23-close-90-close
He notes that beginner time should be 2.8 seconds. I ran my best times last night at 3.3 seconds. So, significantly slow... My greatest increase came from understanding that I had to be rotating my upper torso WHILE performing the reload. I also note that I've not been a very coordinated person my whole life.
I've seen Caleb's advice on breaking down a drill and I've read ToddG's advice from today's blog entry (Speed vs. Accuracy) and a previous blog entry about how practicing the same thing over and over again won't necessarily lead to improvement. With the exception of rotate torso I already dry fire practice the other steps; draw, execute shot, rotate torso while reloading and execute shot.
What is a good approach to improve the total drill?
happy shooting, dv
He notes that beginner time should be 2.8 seconds. I ran my best times last night at 3.3 seconds. So, significantly slow... My greatest increase came from understanding that I had to be rotating my upper torso WHILE performing the reload. I also note that I've not been a very coordinated person my whole life.
I've seen Caleb's advice on breaking down a drill and I've read ToddG's advice from today's blog entry (Speed vs. Accuracy) and a previous blog entry about how practicing the same thing over and over again won't necessarily lead to improvement. With the exception of rotate torso I already dry fire practice the other steps; draw, execute shot, rotate torso while reloading and execute shot.
What is a good approach to improve the total drill?
happy shooting, dv