See @Clusterfrack ... we should make those Kevlar junk pouch holster attachments and sell them to IDPA clubs!
See @Clusterfrack ... we should make those Kevlar junk pouch holster attachments and sell them to IDPA clubs!
http://instagram.com/p/CKMgCSpj3QW/
Was I very unsafe?
Jay Beal made open class Master using a Roland special aiwb. It was gamed out but that’s just insane. I don’t believe anyone has ever made GM aiwb but that’s not because of skill. Most of em run it and use minor scoring. They have GM skills. Les is a GM in production and Jay finished top 5 at nationals in CO.
"Shooting is 90% mental. The rest is in your head." -Nils
@Les Pepperoni is that at Ruskin? I need to get down there sometime.
That makes sense, thanks for the correction. I do recall listening to or reading Gabe describing what a severe limiting factor it is to use minor in those divisions which, again, makes sense.
Also count me in as one of the guys described in a previous comment who just shows up to run carry gear on the clock. I’ve only occasionally shot a small local USPSA match. I’m not registered and personally don’t have the time and funds to seriously compete and/or chase a classification, as much as I’d like to if I had unlimited resources. So I’m not too interested in IDPA. I’d need different gear and since I’m not in it for the game itself, I’m not investing in that gear. Which is fine for me, it means I just shoot USPSA or maybe find an IDPA where someone will let me just shoot the stage for no score.
As a competitor, I have no problem with it. It's an interesting style, not permitted by my TexMex gifted body. As an SO, I have problems. I cannot see or manage the holster or draw and I have already seen glock leg. It makes me liable and my TQ is not going to help an abdominal wound.
Can you elaborate on this point please?
I do not understand how you could be held liable for someone else shooting themselves when doing something they decided to do of their own volition, and which activity they had to sign a liability waiver in order to participate in, thus acknowledging that they were taking risks in doing so. At no point did you instruct them to point the gun at their own body and press the trigger, right?