7 yds
Open top holster with open button up shirt
2.84 in a 5.68 FAST- clean
2 hits
7 yds
Open top holster with open button up shirt
2.84 in a 5.68 FAST- clean
2 hits
Last edited by senorlechero; 06-30-2012 at 03:14 PM.
7 yards
M&P9 Pro, Blade Tech holster, open front concealment (IDPA setup).
I made it to the range twice this last week and ran this drill twice, once cold, and once at the end.
Day one cold: 3.45 Day two cold: 3.43
Day one warm: 3.03 Day two warm: 3.13
No misses on those 4 runs. I may be slow, but at least I am consistantly slow
7 yards
Glock 19 in high noon tuckable holster AIWB with a tucked in polo shirt
2.79 clean
3.06 clean
7 yards from concealment
Glock 17, Raven Concealment Systems OWB holster
"When the phone rang, Parker was in the garage, killing a man."
Tried to adhere as closely as possible to the ‘cold’ spirit of this drill.
7 yard distance on all reps. All reps shot cold, no draw, just swapping out the magazine in the gun for a magazine loaded with old carry ammo that needed to be gotten rid of. That was the only manipulation of the gun before shooting, and I used my support hand to do it so I don’t think it did anything to help me.
Used my carry Gen3 G34, with Ameriglo Operator sights, concealed under a closed-front shirt in a Keepers Concealment Keeper. Ammo was Gold Dot 124gr + p.
6/26/2012:
Last practice ~6 hours prior.
1.30, .50 = 1.80 (-1) Very disappointed in myself on this one. Saw the sights on target, then yipped with my support hand during the trigger press, shoving the first shot high off the 3x5 into the forehead area.
6/27/2012:
Last practice ~18 hours prior.
1.28, .56 = 1.84 clean.
6/28/2012:
Last practice ~6 hours prior.
1.24, .49 = 1.73 clean.
--
I had hoped to shoot this again today, but it doesn’t look like it’s going to happen.
--
I did nothing to warm up for these drills. I also wasn’t going to forego my regular practice regimen just to make this drill colder. Because I practice drawing and pressing the trigger at least a couple times a day, I get the benefit of never being all that cold, which I think is an important benefit of frequent practice.