First, if you've not seen Justine, Jalice or Ashley shoot in matches, it is a sight to behold. If you've seen them, then you know how fast they move, how fearless they are in shooting on the move and in awkward spaces, how great their entries and exits and transitions are, etc, etc - basically, everything that determines match placement over raw split speed. Last hi-cap Nationals I saw Justine shoot a medium distance target falling out from the activator plate (a raised stand) towards the next array - I didn't see anyone from two all male super-squads attempt that.
Second, some of the core TPC techniques that are so effective in controlling them guns fit small-handed shooters better. For example, the quarter panel technique, which is really awesome, does make a biomechanical sense, and requires zero physical strength, is much easier to execute if one's hands are small.
Last edited by YVK; 11-18-2019 at 09:11 AM.
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You previously wrote: "A point to conclude on: I didn't think that a quarter panel technique was a big deal."
Have you reconsidered? Im going back and forth between the quarter panel technique and crushing with my support hand, and would love to hear what you think....
Last edited by gomerpyle; 11-18-2019 at 12:00 PM.
I think it is a valuable technique that makes a ton of sense mechanically. My problem with it is that I can't execute it, barely with a slow deliberate placing of my hands on a gun and never with a speed draw. The size of my hands, the ergos of my guns, where my strong hand goes on a gun all lead to inability to make my support hand to go around that corner. Given that I get decent results when I do the gripping correctly even without the quarter panel, I still think that it is not a bid deal. I would've preferred to be able to do it, I think I wouldn't have had to grip as hard as I try now, but I can't and I don't have much concerns about.
My current day-to-day support grip strength is 120 lbs, as measured on a medical equipment and using the agreed on technique. I estimated Ben's grip strength (not his max, his gun gripping strength) at about maybe 140. I do grip strength exercises very carefully, making sure to avoid overuse, and I started to shoot the doubles drill with a 45 ACP as an adjunct to grip strength development. Based what I see on my sights/dots, I am still in a crush the grip camp, I just don't think that crushing means 2.5 CoC effort.
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The arm hangs relaxed alongside the body, then the elbow is flexed 90 degrees so the fist points forward, then grip, hold for a couple of secs, release. We use it to assess for frailty.
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Yes. I've done that in the past. I ask the instructor to grab my right forearm with their support hand, applying the correct pressure, and it gives me the first impression. I then ask them to keep holding it and squeeze my right forearm with my support hand, trying to replicate it. Ben's pressure didn't feel painful but I was unable to generate the same amount myself.
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