Another thing I noticed... Going slow, without "doing the robot" through the draw count is not easy.
Domo arigato, Mr. Roboto
Another thing I noticed... Going slow, without "doing the robot" through the draw count is not easy.
Domo arigato, Mr. Roboto
Todd,
Sorry for digging up an old thread but this n00b needs further clarification.
Could you give an example of firing "from retention"? Is that just a way of saying "shooting from a holster with an active retention mechanism like a thumb break or, for example, Safariland's ALS"? I'm still not clear on the concept, in spite of your quoted explanation. Like I said, totall n00b so forgive my ignorance.
No worries. The confusion is understandable because "retention" is a double use term in this industry.
"Shooting from retention" in this context means shooting from a body position that anticipates a nearby threat having the ability to grab your gun and take it from you if you stand in a normal extended stance. As mentioned previously there are a variety of different techniques taught by different instructors, but the gist is that you keep the gun closer to your body while making sure you don't accidentally shoot yourself.
Todd, on the "5 reps of Wall Drill from the holster, WHO." How do you grip the gun coming out of the holster? Are you gripping it upside down and flipping it after its out of the holster or what? I'm using a IWB at 4:00. It about kills my weak hand shoulder to get a correct grip on the gun.
EDIT: Just noticed I can swing my arm behind me and draw from the rear.
Sorry for the ignorant, but what does the acronym stand for?
2H, SHO ,WHO, TRB, LRW
Thanks
In order:
2-handed
Strong Hand only
Week Hand Only
Tap Rack Bang (a malfunction clearing technique. TAP the magazine. RACK the slide. BANG/pull the trigger)
Lock Rip Work (a malfunction clearing technique for more stubborn malfunctions. LOCK the slide back. RIP the magazine out. WORK the action)