Case closed as far as I am concerned. Forget shooting fast or slow, shoot carefully.
Again, shoot carefully. Alternatively, give John and other coppers a DAK trigger in their Sig, and it will take care of that fast split problem right away.
Case closed as far as I am concerned. Forget shooting fast or slow, shoot carefully.
Again, shoot carefully. Alternatively, give John and other coppers a DAK trigger in their Sig, and it will take care of that fast split problem right away.
Likes pretty much everything in every caliber.
I had an ER nurse in a class. I noticed she kept taking all head shots. Her response when asked why, "'I've seen too many people who have been shot in the chest putting up a fight in the ER." Point taken.
I've shot a few sim scenarios like that -- the best ones are the ones the Sim Operator can alter on the fly.
To me what this illustrates on a Macro level is why we need 4 plus types of training (square range paper, FATS style sim, FoF sim, and live 360degree 'houses' with reactive targetry).
Quite often in the "run n' gun" aspect does not make shooters account for the real life realities of everyone moves - bad guys, good guys, and unknowns.
Kevin S. Boland
Director of R&D
Law Tactical LLC
www.lawtactical.com
kevin@lawtactical.com
407-451-4544
In support of sim training, virtually all high level flight training (jets and turboprops) is done in a simulator. It is not uncommon to get type rated in a new aircraft in the simulator, and then make your first flight in that aircraft, with no specific training beyond what you did in the sim. The type of emergency training you can do in the sim is often much more difficult than what you would in the real aircraft, because fear of crashing and death in the real aircraft has this habit of limiting what you do there.
Likes pretty much everything in every caliber.
Thank you for the additional comments John, and everyone for the discussion.
Technical excellence supports tactical preparedness
Lord of the Food Court
http://www.gabewhitetraining.com
Well, YA!
Fast or slow - sometimes easier said than done. IT does become easier when you have good FoF or FATs training. something that a lot of people can't either afford or arrange for in their training regimen.
In all seriousness not really. My splits with my 686 revolver are routinely .1 second faster than my splits on my M&P with Apex goodies installed.
Scott
Only Hits Count - The Faster the Hit the more it Counts!!!!!!; DELIVER THE SHOT!
Stephen Hillier - "An amateur practices until he can do it right, a professional practices until he can't do it wrong."
For the scholarly in intent - check out
http://www.investigativesciencesjour...load/5382/3750
See the section on time to stop shooting.
Here's one bit of info:
Number of Shooters Firing Extra Shots 25
Percentage of Shooters Firing 0 Extra Shots 31%
Percentage of Shooters Firing 1 Extra Shots 44%
Percentage of Shooters Firing 2 Extra Shots 17%
Percentage of Shooters Firing 3 Extra Shots 8%