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Thread: Jeff Cooper and the Creation of IPSC

  1. #21
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    @P_Pete

    You’re asking the same questions many have…

    The analogy is SCCA autocross where people trick out their daily drivers to compete in a racing competition.

    They’ve tried making bone stock classes in the past but turns out nobody wants to race their stock shitboxes and those classes withered away.

    Same thing with the “Everyman” USPSA classes. The people who care about bone stock guns aren’t the ones that show up to these things. People like fancy fast stuff even though it’s a very minor contributor to USPSA until you get to the A/M/GM level.

    I apologize to the people that have seen these videos before.

    But when I practiced and exclusively competed with a Shadow 2, I had no problem transferring those skills to a stock P365X.





    Shootin’s shootin and if you get really good with one, you can be very good with everything.

    Sticking only with what you carry in the configuration you’re going to carry really only applies to D/C/B level where the level of skill and automaticity isn’t quite there.

  2. #22
    Quote Originally Posted by mmc45414 View Post
    Or maybe not, I probably was only there a time or two, most of my matches were at Butler County Sportsman's Club. I know the avatar pic is from Butler County, not sure about this picture. I didn't have a very close relationship with a barber in those days...

    Attachment 71010
    Wow! Used to shoot Bob Tulley matches at Butler sportsman in the late 90s with jeff mishoes of venice arms, Jeff Pelfrey, W, Larry Galaske.

  3. #23
    Quote Originally Posted by JCN View Post
    @P_Pete

    You’re asking the same questions many have…

    The analogy is SCCA autocross where people trick out their daily drivers to compete in a racing competition.

    They’ve tried making bone stock classes in the past but turns out nobody wants to race their stock shitboxes and those classes withered away.

    Same thing with the “Everyman” USPSA classes. The people who care about bone stock guns aren’t the ones that show up to these things. People like fancy fast stuff even though it’s a very minor contributor to USPSA until you get to the A/M/GM level.

    I apologize to the people that have seen these videos before.

    But when I practiced and exclusively competed with a Shadow 2, I had no problem transferring those skills to a stock P365X.

    Shootin’s shootin and if you get really good with one, you can be very good with everything.

    Sticking only with what you carry in the configuration you’re going to carry really only applies to D/C/B level where the level of skill and automaticity isn’t quite there.
    thanks , that makes some sense

    I may try carry optics at some point for right now I am thinking of just running my G17 in Limited and filling my mags back up spend the time working on getting better for me not worrying about how I place.

  4. #24
    Quote Originally Posted by P_Pete View Post
    spend the time working on getting better for me not worrying about how I place.
    I have been enjoying three gun much more since I set myself free from the notion that I was gonna win...
    Seriously, I was VERY frustrated by the stages that required shotgun reloading, until I did two things:
    I accepted that I would finish behind people that had put tons of effort into the stunt of quad loading, and practiced enough to get a little bit better at twin loading.

  5. #25
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    Quote Originally Posted by P_Pete View Post
    thanks , that makes some sense

    I may try carry optics at some point for right now I am thinking of just running my G17 in Limited and filling my mags back up spend the time working on getting better for me not worrying about how I place.
    I think carry optics is a faster way to get better as dots give good dry feedback and there are a number of people to compete and compare with. I think it’s okay to loosely check progress with results but with a grain of salt. For someone working on improving it doesn’t mean as much to beat a close rival because they had a gun malfunction. I usually try and judge my own performance and then contextualize it on each stage results to see if my assessment has some merit.

    Quote Originally Posted by mmc45414 View Post
    I have been enjoying three gun much more since I set myself free from the notion that I was gonna win...
    Seriously, I was VERY frustrated by the stages that required shotgun reloading, until I did two things:
    I accepted that I would finish behind people that had put tons of effort into the stunt of quad loading, and practiced enough to get a little bit better at twin loading.
    Or you could do 2 gun and then have lunch and do a round of sporting clays!

  6. #26
    Quote Originally Posted by JCN View Post
    I think carry optics is a faster way to get better as dots give good dry feedback and there are a number of people to compete and compare with.
    I have been dabbling in a little USPSA style matches indoors, and the dot also makes it a hell of a lot easier for me to see sights indoors. More of a shooting skill measurement than visual acuity test (I am 62yo...).


    Quote Originally Posted by JCN View Post
    I think it’s okay to loosely check progress with results but with a grain of salt. For someone working on improving it doesn’t mean as much to beat a close rival because they had a gun malfunction. I usually try and judge my own performance and then contextualize it on each stage results to see if my assessment has some merit.
    I can't help but care a little about the placement order, but then I started looking at the percentage rating, and I was striving to finish better than 70%. Then I realized that depends on who shows up, when another day the second place shooter was 69%!

    Quote Originally Posted by JCN View Post
    Or you could do 2 gun and then have lunch and do a round of sporting clays!
    One of the ways I got better at twin loading was wearing my shell holder when I was skeet shooting and twin loading for practice

  7. #27
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    Quote Originally Posted by mmc45414 View Post
    I have been dabbling in a little USPSA style matches indoors, and the dot also makes it a hell of a lot easier for me to see sights indoors. More of a shooting skill measurement than visual acuity test (I am 62yo...).

    I can't help but care a little about the placement order, but then I started looking at the percentage rating, and I was striving to finish better than 70%. Then I realized that depends on who shows up, when another day the second place shooter was 69%!

    One of the ways I got better at twin loading was wearing my shell holder when I was skeet shooting and twin loading for practice
    Great insights!

    It’s pretty striking how handicapped iron sight shooters are in indoor USPSA league where overhead lighting is poor and the backstop is dark. I remember one fairly poorly lit stage where the iron shooters all logged multiple misses and the average hit factor was under 1.0 haha.

    That all factors into my decision to have a dot on my carry gun since a dark parking ramp or alley would be similarly lit. I don’t want my equipment to grossly hamper my skill for self defense.

    I think most of us care a fair amount how we do at matches. But for learning it’s important to get proper feedback for improvement. Judging by stage generally gives better data to exclude outliers when working on specific things.

    I have so many interests that I don’t feel like shotgun reloading at speed is on the radar with limited training time. Kudos for you in finding a way to multi-task.

  8. #28
    Quote Originally Posted by JCN View Post
    I have so many interests that I don’t feel like shotgun reloading at speed is on the radar with limited training time. Kudos for you in finding a way to multi-task.
    In the beginning I felt like I was just teaching myself a stupid stunt, but then I started to enjoy the shotgun stages, and this has lead to the recent purchase of two more shotguns...

  9. #29
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    Quote Originally Posted by P_Pete View Post
    new to the site been around shooting a while.

    I think it has lost a lot of the practical element as the founders pointed out

    I wasn't shooting anything in 78 don't think I fired my first round till about 88

    I shot my first USPSA match this last weekend with my 18 year old son.

    we have both been shooting club level action pistol for a while myself about 10 years and him since he turned 12.

    when I started with action pistol it was with the Smith M39 single stack 9mm I bought when I was 18 I bought my first glock 17 not long after.

    I chased holsters and equipment to get faster and make shooting easier I was on a tight budget but bought some stuff cast most of my own bullets at the time to keep it affordable . in not very long I found myself going in the direction of making it really good practice and not worrying about speed that isn't to say I didn't get faster I did but chasing speed by making me better and not worrying about shaving seconds with gear.

    got to where I was drawing from concealment , wearing all my gear to the range besides my ear muffs , some times I even shot with just ear plugs I could keep in my pocket the only thing I took out of my bag was boxes of ammo and work gloves to wear during stage setup.
    It was and is very good practice my carry load shoots to the same POA/POI as my practice ammo

    at the Match this weekend I feel like I did ok , I focused on running it clean and let the time be what it was
    I really enjoyed the stages and look forward to shooting many more

    I think USPSA could use a Carry division something along the lines of gun not to exceed 5 inches of barrel length and not more than 32oz with a 20 round max something you would actually carry

    Production is what I shot and probably where I will stay unless I go limited just to be able to fill my mags to capacity.
    running a mostly stock Glock puts it at disadvantage against guns that weigh twice as much.

    and it may be that IDPA is the game to play for more practical practice however it is not popular in WI the only matches seem to be hours away

    could we grow the sport more if a division was set up to a working mans gun?
    something where you could be on par with others running basically out of the box 4-600 dollar guns or do people immediately get discouraged running against a CZ Shadow II at 46.5 oz if loaded to 10 rounds it can play in Production.

    the other thing I am not so sure about is Major scoring , I don't think it has as much of a place as it maybe once did. we are at a place where a quality personal defense round in 9mm , 45acp or 40s&W are honestly all very close to each other in FPE they are calibrated to stop in the same range in ballistics gel >12 inches and <18

    looking at ammo comparisons 9mm 40 and 45 are often within an inch or two of each other in the same calibrated gel tests and less difference in FPE than a 22lr.

    even on things like effectiveness on bear we aren't seeing major differences in the 3 common duty calibers. Hits on target matter more than power factor

    at what point does 0.048 inches make a bad shot a good shot other than maybe on a target you broke the line or you didn't but given pressed in scoring lines on carboard targets even that will be splitting hairs.

    I am just going to keep running close to how I carry , make it good practice and enjoy it for competing against myself.
    B class Production guy here.

    I shoot a Beretta 92FS that I’ve done some fairly basic modifications to. Mods I’ve include, but are not limited to:

    Steel guide rod
    Steel trigger
    D hammer spring
    G10 grips
    Les Pepperoni rear sight
    Oversized magazine release

    These are all mods that I’d make to a Beretta 92 if I were to carry it and I feel no need to change anything else on it. What’s holding me back from going to A class and beyond is my participation in the sport and diligence in practice right now. I can absolutely make M and GM if I have the drive and motivation to do so with this setup. The gun is definitely not holding me back.

    A lot of people like to make it out to be an equipment race. It’s largely not, about half of the 2021 Limited Nationals top guys were shooting polymer guns. Shoot what fits you and work on improving yourself. Most of the gear out there generally won’t hold you back. Heck, here’s a link to an interview for a guy that made GM in Carry Optics with a Glock 26.

    https://youtu.be/LHe81qKET2k

    Don’t ask if the gun you’re shooting is holding you back or if you need something better. Chances are is that its not or you don’t.

  10. #30
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    Quote Originally Posted by spinmove_ View Post
    Most of the gear out there generally won’t hold you back. Heck, here’s a link to an interview for a guy that made GM in Carry Optics with a Glock 26.

    https://youtu.be/LHe81qKET2k

    Don’t ask if the gun you’re shooting is holding you back or if you need something better. Chances are is that its not or you don’t.
    That's overly simplistic. The reality is that the gun can hold you back 2-5%. The guy you're referencing with the Glock 26 even said that in testing he was consistently better performing with the Glock 34 he had. He just wanted to do it with the handicap.

    For most shooters 2-5% is dwarfed by their skill limitation. As you get further up the food chain 2-5% starts meaning more.

    This is from his own post here about what kind of dedication it took to make GM with a G26. It wasn't "casual." He practiced for multiple HOURS per day.

    Quote Originally Posted by Glock26 View Post
    I shot a gun for the first time around August 2018. My first purchase was picked up on October 1, 2018. First competition was July 13, 2019 and made GM in CO on September 13, 2020. At least 8 of these months were spent traveling with no gun.

    CO Progression:
    • 6/27/2020 - C (41.3320)
    • 7/26/2020 - B (71.3752)
    • 8/2/2020 - A (78.1085)
    • 8/16/2020 - M (85.9280)
    • 9/13/2020 - GM (96.0323)


    My journey took roughly 770 days.
    1. Time to first purchase: ~60 days
    2. Additional time to first competition: 285
    3. Additional time to first dot usage: 301
    4. Additional time to GM: 127


    Theoretical improvements to bring total to around 121 days:
    1. Time to first purchase: 1
    2. Additional time to first competition: 30 (first month spent on gun manipulation and doubles)
    3. Additional time to first dot usage: 0 (compete with a dot from the get go)
    4. Additional time to GM: 90 (alternate between pure alpha and pure speed for stages)


    What's needed:
    • A mentality to be the best shooter in the world (nearly delusional level)
    • A highly observant individual that is always willing to adjust technique
    • A person who doesn't second guess his or her gear
    • Roughly 10K rounds (not so much where they're meaningless, but enough to understand how a gun behaves)
    • A mentor of the same mentality who has already knows how to shoot that can communicate the nuances of various techniques (Add at least 6 months if the person has to self-discover)
    • At least 4 hours a day that can be dedicated to shooting
    • An obsessed learner
    • All classifier match at the end (this can literally save 5 weeks, if a person can consistently shoot GM HF)


    All this assumes that making GM equates to proficiency.
    Quote Originally Posted by JCN View Post
    Extremely impressive! Congrats!

    It’s interesting to note that if you take the 770 days of 4h/day and multiply that by 4 to bring it down to a casual 1h/day.
    That’s 3000 days or about 8.5 years.

    That seems about right.
    I think the theoretical 120 days might not be possible due to the limit of synapse formation and muscle strength / coordination. There is probably a limit of how fast one can build muscle memory.

    It is seriously impressive the dedication and hours you put in! Congrats!
    In rereading it, it seems that maybe Tony was saying that 121 days at 4 hours per day and that 770 was done at scaled 45-60 min per day which is about right.
    Last edited by JCN; 12-09-2021 at 06:20 AM.

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