Here are other Point Shooting vs. Sight Shooting articles worth checking out as well:
Colonel Rex Applegate on Point Shooting
The Connection Between Combat and Range Results
Point Shooting vs. Sight Shooting (counterpoint to the article below)
Point Shooting vs. Sight Shooting – Handgun Training Effectiveness from the NYPD SOP 9 results
Point Shooting vs. Sight Shooting – Handgun Training Effectiveness (LAPD)
…….
The following guest article was written and submitted by John Veit
We welcome a variety of points of view on the subjects of shooting and marksmanship. Test them objectively on the range and let the results fall where they may.
HAS YOUR HANDGUN TRAINING SET YOU UP TO BE KILLED?
by John Veit
Introduction:
I write about and/or post information that mainly comes from studies, stats, and writings by GUN EXPERTS and GUN PROFESSIONALS, plus my stuff that comes from my experience and testing. The information in this article is fact based.
What is, is what is. And getting upset over it, won’t change it.
Hopefully, this article will spur introspection, investigation, and discussion, which will lead to improved self defense survival methods for use by police and home defenders.
HAS YOUR HANDGUN TRAINING SET YOU UP TO BE KILLED?
According to modern science, the study of thousands of police combat studies, and real time gunfight videos, Sight Shooting is not used in most all close quarters life threat self defense situations.
As such, it follows that if you have been taught only Sight Shooting for self defense use, or if the main part of your training was on Sight Shooting with minimal emphasis on Point Shooting, then you have been set up to be killed.
Unless you know of, and how to use an alternate shooting method such as Point Shooting, you will have no effective shooting method available for use in a real close quarters life threat situation. And it is in those situations, where your chance of being shot or killed is the greatest.
Now, some folks consider Point Shooting to be an advanced technique that is to be taught only after the fundamentals of shooting (Sight Shooting), are mastered. And others say that countless hours of training, and the sending of thousands of rounds down range, are required to become proficient in Point Shooting and to maintain proficiency. To my thinking, those are just “polite” ways for rejecting it.
Sight Shooting zealots dismiss it out of hand as being the devil’s work or close to it. Or they ridicule and heap scorn on those like me, who advocate for its use, and in particular for the use of P&S in close quarters self defense. It is as though they believe that if you squelch, suppress, or ridicule Point Shooting, it will go away, and then all will be right in the world of the gun.
What the true believer types don’t do, is bring forward scientific studies, stats, plus videos of close quarters gun fights which show/prove that Sight Shooting can be used effectively in close quarters life threat situations.
And since Sight Shooting has been taught for over 100 years, there should be many if not thousands of studies, stats, and films/videos that prove the case for the use of Sight Shooting.
But where are they? If by some chance, they exist, how come they have not been made freely available to the millions of home defenders who have a gun at home for self defense use?
Perhaps they are being kept under raps at some undisclosed location in or near Area 51?
This is not to make light of the traditional ways in the world of the gun, or the long standing dogma found in training manuals, and represented in the specifications for courses of fire, and the qualification requirements for this or that position or license.
In hierarchical organizations, they are powerful tools which can be used as barriers against, and to suppress innovation and change.
For example, the US Army’s FM 3-23.35 – Combat Training With Pistols M9 And M11, is both tradition driven and dogma laden. Point Shooting is given mention in it, but only with a few sentences, and only after pages and pages are first spent on describing in great detail, and with both words and pictures, the proper stance, grip, sighting, breathing, and trigger squeezing that make up the must-be-met-requirements-for-successful-Sight-Shooting.
Point Shooting information is found in the manual’s section on combat marksmanship. But, before you get to it, you first have to wade through a lead and cautionary paragraph of marksmanship dogma.
“After a soldier becomes proficient in the fundamentals of marksmanship, he progresses to advanced techniques of combat marksmanship. The main use of the pistol is to engage the enemy at close range with quick, accurate fire. In shooting encounters, it is not the first round fired that wins the engagement, but the first accurately fired round. The soldier should use his sights when engaging the enemy unless this would place the weapon within arm’s reach of the enemy.
“Quick-Fire Point Shooting. This is for engaging an enemy at less than 5 yards and is also useful for night firing. Using a two-hand grip, the firer brings the weapon up close to the body until it reaches chin level. He then thrusts it forward until both arms are straight. The arms and body form a triangle, which can be aimed as a unit. In thrusting the weapon forward, the firer can imagine that there is a box between him and the enemy, and he is thrusting the weapon into the box. The trigger is smoothly squeezed to the rear as the elbows straighten.”
To me, Quick-Fire Point Shooting is practical and much easier than trying to meet the must-be-met-requirements-for-successful-Sight-Shooting. And it is generally in line with the results of modern investigative science, combat studies, and the literature. Modern science says that, the loss of near vision and the loss of fine motor skills, both of which are necessary to Sight Shooting, can be expected to be lost with the activation of our Flight or Fight response, which occurs automatically in close quarters life threat situations and is virtually uncontrollable.
Also, per combat studies and the literature, most all gunfights occur at close quarters, in poor light where the sights will be difficult to see and use, and where there will be no time to use them even if one could focus on them. As such, learning and knowing how to use Point Shooting of some kind, makes life over death sense.
The following is from Col. Rex Applegate’s book Kill or get Killed. It is what he says about the combat use of Sight Shooting by a skilled target shooter in a life threat situation.
“… It is dark, he is in an alley, a poorly lighted street, or a room in a building. He can hardly see his gun at arm’s length, to say nothing of the sights. His muscles are tense, his nerves keyed up to a fighting pitch.
“Suddenly the enemy starts shooting at him from an unexpected quarter.
“Even if he could see the sights, would he take the time to line them up and fire at the enemy’s gun flash? Does he take up the trigger slack and squeeze off the shot as he has been taught to do in target shooting?
“Will he make sure that his feet are properly positioned and that he is breathing correctly? He certainly will not! He will grip his gun convulsively, raise it, point or shove it in the general direction of the enemy, and pull (not squeeze) the trigger.
“…In daylight he will do exactly the same thing….
“It is a matter of record that the average hand gun shooting affray takes place at a distance not exceeding 20 feet…Any distance not exceeding 40 feet can be considered as close quarters in the combat use of the pistol or revolver. Beyond that distance the capabilities of the average individual and of the weapon show a marked decline.
“…By proper training at combat ranges, man-killing accuracy, without the use of sights and with extreme speed, can be acquired by the average soldier or police officer. This can be done in less time, and with less expenditure of ammunition, than is required to become even a fair target shot.”
A real time gunfight.
The following text plus pictures from a 2/9/09 New Smyrna Beach, Fl. robbery video, describe and show what happened in a real time life threat situation in which Point Shooting was employed.
The “stop action” pictures show portions of the action that can be missed easily when watching the video at “normal speed.”
At the start of the video, the robber is seen quickly entering the store. As he moves into the store, he tosses his back pack over the counter, and he also brandishes his gun at a female employee who is moving quickly from the right to the left behind the counter, and who then disappears into one of the aisles between the shelves of pills.
The video time line is now showing 22 seconds.
In the first picture below, the druggist is threatened, and in the second, the robber brandishes his gun in the direction of the guard (a retired Officer). That takes 2 seconds.
It is obvious that the guard is hidden from the view of the robber by the “privacy shield” that divides the counter, as the robber’s attention returns to and stays on the druggist.
In the next two pics, the druggist starts to move to get some pills, and the guard’s gun is seen in his hand for just a part of a second. 2 more seconds have elapsed.
In the next two pics, the druggist goes into an aisle to get some pills and then returns with some pills in hand. That takes 6 more seconds.
The following 6 pics show what happens during the next 2 seconds.
The druggist has returned with pills in hand, and the guard is out of the camera’s field of view. The guard has started his move to confront the robber, and he continues to move throughout this sequence of pictures.
The robber notices the guard, and then brings his gun around towards the guard. The guard’s pistol is in a two handed Isosceles type grip which puts the gun close to his centerline and also points it towards the robber.
The robber points his gun at the guard. The robber is shot.
I was surprised that the guard was not shot when I first saw the picture showing the robber’s gun pointed at him. It clearly shows that the guard is a hairbreadth away from being shot. And that certainly would have happened, had the guard not shot the robber.
As to why the robber did not shoot, it could have been that he made the decision to shoot, and was physically in the process of doing that when he was shot.
I also wondered why the guard had not shot the robber, when the robber was bringing his gun around towards the guard. It may have been, as just mentioned about the robber, that the guard made the decision to shoot, and was in the physical process of doing that. That takes a fraction of a second, and during the lag-time, the robber pointed his gun directly at the guard.
Pictures freeze the actions being taken. So, it may look like things happened slower than they actually did. In real time, it took less than two seconds for the guard to move out from behind the counter, confront the threat, and then shoot.
These pictures show/prove that Point Shooting does work, and that it is deadly effective.
If the guard had attempted to use the sights, he probably would have missed seeing the gun being pointed at him, as per the basic marksmanship section of the Army’s combat pistol manual: “The eye can focus on only one object at a time at different distances. Therefore, the last focus of the eye is always on the front sight. When the front sight is seen clearly, the rear sight and target will appear hazy.”
The first picture below is an illustration from the Army’s pistol manual. The front sight is the solid black square, and the back sight and target appear as the hatched areas. The other picture shows sights imposed on a blurred and dark target like the robber’s hooded jacket.
In the robbery situation, it would have been folly to attempt to line up the sights, and focus on the front sight with the target appearing hazy, whilst squeezing the trigger smoothly until the shot broke.
Had the guard taken the time to try to Sight Shoot, he in all probability would be the one who ended up dying on the floor.
And what your average home defender? What is he/she to do when someone is close approaching with murder on their mind? Would he/she have the time and the presence of mind to meet the must-be-met-requirements-for-successful-Sight-Shooting?
I think not.
Now, there are those who say they have been there and done that, and they say that they saw and used their sights, except when shooting at contact distance.
Here is a comment from a recent warriortalk.com thread. It is very similar to others that one comes across from time to time on the web.
“I fired 18 rounds in three separate shootings. I hit with every round. This is why: I used my sights for all but 3 rounds and those were contact wounds (muzzle in contact with BG’s body). I am an ordinary man with ordinary physical traits, and if I can be taught to do this, any man who can generate the fighting spirit and can control his fear can do the same….
After some responses which included my request for specifics of the encounters (AAR details), and which where not furnished, the poster concluded with:
“…. No need to pay me deference, if I could have avoided it, I would have!
“Remember though that lots of folks with lots of good ideas have never had to do it for real, and my experience is not typictureal when you look at published numbers. This is why I distrust published numbers at times….I’m not sure where they get the numbers.”
Now, I don’t doubt the honesty and sincerity of the poster and others like him. There are a lot of good and honest folks who obviously believe that Sight Shooting can be used in real close quarters life threat shootings.
There is one well known trainer back in the Southeast, who considers P&S to be BS, and says that his students have prevailed in a number of shootings over the years, and they used their sights.
Unfortunately for him and the web thread poster, unless they have data that has been gathered in a scientifically sound manner, and which is readily available for review, what they say is open to serious question as to its soundness and applicability to the millions of home defenders in the US.
As to P&S, which is a method of Point Shooting that has been used as far back as 1835, here is a picture of Jack Ruby shooting Oswald using P&S.
Note that Ruby is back from, and off to the left of one of the officers holding Oswald. The target area is not large because of the position of Oswald’s arms and the policeman’s arm. And all of them are moving. So, there is no time to do anything but Point & Shoot.
Ruby is using P&S – that is his index finger is along side the gun, and his middle finger pulls the trigger. It can be seen sticking through the trigger guard in the picture. P&S may be BS to some, but it was terminal for Oswald.
Now, we know that there can be exceptions to most any rule or finding. And we also know from studies and the literature, that the circumstances of armed encounters, the distances between the participants, and whether they are acting or reacting, can affect what happens. And if a person is a SEAL or SWAT operator, he/she may have the skills and training to be able to function extraordinarily regardless of the situation at hand.
But if you are just a run of the mill mortal, chances are that unless you know how to Point Shoot effectively, you will do as thousands of police have done in combat.
I have seen lots of shooting videos. And in them, the participants do not aim. They just point their guns towards the other and blast away.
It is obvious that any Sight Shooting training that they may have had, goes out the window. What is defaulted to is instinctive or Spray and Pray shooting. And the recognized miss rate in armed encounters, is over 80%.
Point Shooting is easy to learn and it can be easily maintained. But, that won’t happen by magic. You have to know about it, and learn how to do it.
Whose looking out for home defenders?
As far as I know, there is no Government agency which has taken on the task of providing the millions and millions of consumer gun owners (police and civilians), with the facts on what works in life threat situations and what will likely get you killed.
Nor is there a private organization like the NRA or the association of Gun Manufactures that has taken on that responsibility.
The ATF and the Federal Trade Commission do not deal with the issue of consumer safety and guns. and the Consumer Products Safety Commission, by its charter, is exempted from dealing with firearms. The Occupational Safety And Health Administration does not deal with consumer issues, only worker concerns. And OSHA has some standards for Personal Protection Equipment like armor vests, but none dealing with handguns that I am aware of.
Why are millions and millions of gun owing citizen consumers being selectively excluded and denied consumer protection in regard to their self defense, since the exclusion and denial, may result in their death?
I think their should be a “proof house” of sorts to look into the question of what works, and what doesn’t.
To those who say, “NO!” to any government involvement, I say that could or would be OK if shooting methods worked as advertised, but they don’t.
This article was submitted by John Veit at pointshooting.com
teri
Mar 11, 2010 @ 22:24:58
Your approch to this argument made no sense whatsoever and i will continue to teach sight shooting prior to point shooting to all of my students. Oh and i am one of those Nationally ranked pro’s
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John M. Buol Jr.
Mar 11, 2010 @ 22:56:08
Please note that this article was written and submitted by John Veit at pointshooting.com and NOT by me (John Buol.) I think it valuable to post material written by others, even if I don’t agree with it.
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KR
Aug 04, 2010 @ 09:07:23
Get a copy of Brian Enos’ book Practical Shooting from http://www.brianenos.com. Brian’s book does an excellent job of explaining the relationship between appropriate sight picture quality, target distance and size, and available time. It’s real simple. When the target is big and close you can get by with fairly coarse alignment of the gun with the target and still get an acceptable hit. When the target size is smaller or it’s farther away, you need more precise alignment – and all of this assumes competent trigger control, which is the skill that most shooters need the most work on. Most everyone that shoots IPSC or IDPA or who has trained with any of the national level schools (Thunder Ranch, Gunsite, InSights, Rangemaster, even the current NRA Personal Protection courses) has been introduced to the concept of accepting a lower quality sight picture, all the way down to “body indexing” relative to target range and size, but also understanding the need for very precise aimed fire for more difficult shots.
Mr. Veit claims that sighted fire does not work – yet 53 students of Tom Givens (Rangemaster school, Memphis) have won documented gunfights in the past 5 years using what Tom teaches, with an average hit ratio of over 90%. Tom’s program focuses on using the appropriate sight picture and good trigger control to create the ability to hit a 6″ target at any distance from 0-50 yards. It’s rooted in the old Gunsite program (where he taught under Col. Cooper) but incorporates all the lessons learned from 20-30 years of IPSC, IDPA and tactical training — much the same as many other programs nationwide all rooted in the same knowledge. We know from actual events that under stress trained shooters can and do use their sights to get good hits. Under stress skill levels drop, which is why it’s important to train to a high level of skill. A failure-based training system where students are encouraged to use techniques that are more likely to result in misses (shove the gun out and ‘smoke and hope’) simply because “that’s what people do” is dangerously negligent in its approach – like basing tactics training on the idea that “most people freeze”. To produce winners, study winners. If you read the history of famous gunfighters, from Wild Bill Hickok to Bill Jordan to Charles Askins to Jim Cirillo, all were masters of aimed fire who understood the “see what you need to see” concept.
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John Buol
Aug 04, 2010 @ 10:35:46
The late Colonel Rex Applegate is still referred to as a point shooting authority. In fact, most point shooting advocates today are influenced by, if not outright copying, Applegate’s methods. During World War II, then 2nd Lieutenant Applegate was tasked with adapting the training being given to British Commando forces for use by OSS agents. Applegate’s methodology was published in his 1943 book Kill or Get Killed. Here’s a quote.
Regarding police training specifically Applegate said,
You read that right. The man that remains the poster child of point shooting felt that aimed group shooting, on bullseye targets no less, was an important component of combat handgun training. It would seem the point shooting advocates that copy him so often never bothered to actually read his book!
See also:
https://firearmusernetwork.com/2010/06/19/point-shooting-vs-sight-shooting-2/
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KR
Aug 04, 2010 @ 10:49:25
All the best trainers and shooters I know are all students of the history of shooting and training, and have put in their time learning everything they can from what has gone before. InSights Training actually offers some “vintage” classes that teach Applegate and 1970’s Weaver/Gunsite curriculum that complements their core courses that teach the more modern approach, which integrates the best of all that’s gone before. Aside from isolated self-anointed windmill-tilters who haven’t taken the time to learn what everyone else is doing, there’s a lot of agreement among all the schools and trainers these days.
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hubie townsend
Dec 27, 2010 @ 17:13:23
Interesting articles. under 7 yards I can quickly and rapidly hit any man size target 100% of the time . beyond that, one must have some part of the front sight inside of the rear or there is a no hit. is all what you train to do. on the army’s pop up, i always shoot the 5 and 7 yards target using p & s to keep my rapid fire close in skills up to snuff. but beyond that i have to use the sights to effect 100% hits.
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John Veit
Dec 30, 2010 @ 21:59:52
Nice responses, and a good New Year to all.
Here’s a link to an article: Let’s take the gloves off: http://www.pointshooting.com/1agloves.htm
And here’s one to an article: Do you have a death wish? http://www.pointshooting.com/1adeath.htm
And here’s one to a vid on survival point shooting: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ix4kNmEYyEk
Hey folks, don’t shoot me, I’m just the messenger. :) :) :)
Read that: take a deap breath, relax, and accept reality as it is.
plus Ha Ha Ha
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Dave M
Mar 25, 2012 @ 16:59:08
Well, I don’t know where Teri teaches but I sure won’t be going to him. It is obvious to me that there is a place for P&S and Sighted Shooting. However, to hear a “nationally rated” teacher be so closed minded is quite disappointing. The article was very clear and was left open to the reader to determine how appropriate the information was for their particular brand of shooting. Why Teri could not understand the article or say it makes no sense makes me wonder about the cognitive capacity of this nationally rated teacher?? I thought the article was thought provoking and brings up a point I will be looking into more than I had planned to. Thank you for the nice write up.
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Bob Kolesar
Oct 21, 2013 @ 22:14:39
Two of the most experienced gunfighters of the last century, Bill Allard and Charles Askins, were both champion bullseye shooters. Allard has been in more shootings than any other cop in the history of the NYPD. Askins, 1937 US pistol champion, was in probably a couple of dozen shootings, maybe more. Both attributed their success and survival to front sight focus under stress, derived from years of competitive shooting. Something to think about.
And while sight alignment probably isn’t necessary at 3-5 feet, excellent trigger control is. Good trigger control is vital at 5 feet or 50 yards. Point shooting doesn’t develop trigger control.
The LAPD, back in the 70’s, taught “point shooting”. Hit ratios were abysmal. It was learned, through much experimentation with both instructors and recruits, that a certain level of proficiency could be attained. The problem was maintaining that proficiency, which degraded rather rapidly. And any kind of accuracy was destroyed at longer distances, due to the emphasis on pointing and slapping the trigger.
Something I’ve learned from my time as a shooter, cop and Soldier is that marksmanship proficiency and tactics aren’t usually the same thing. A good marksman can learn tactics easily; it comes from applying basic rules of engagement, experience and common sense. Once a certain level of proficiency is gained, that marksmanship proficiency can be applied to tactical scenarios. A poor marksman exercising good tactics can still lose a gunfight.
My point, which has been made numerous times over the last hundred years or more, is to learn to shoot first…constant practice of the basic, boring drills of sight alignment and trigger control on a standard target, over and over again. Developing absolute muscle memory between the brain and trigger finger is the key. This is boring and monotonous, though. No speed rocks, drawing on sinister-looking color targets, no rapid-fire failure drills, no jumping left or right while doing a road-house spin. A target won’t lie; it’ll tell you where you need improvement. Kind of like the wife of 20 years that knows you and tells you, whether you want to hear it or not. I was always happy to get a new recruit (when I was a training officer) who could shoot, and had the gold DX badge to prove it. I could teach him tactics; he already had the confidence regarding weapons handling and marksmanship.
Bob Kolesar,
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Sherrill
Sep 01, 2014 @ 13:47:35
Hey there! I’ve been reading your weblog for some time now and
finally got the bravery to go ahead and give you a shout out from Kingwood Tx!
Just wanted to mention keep up the fantastic job!
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Guy Keys
Feb 08, 2016 @ 14:35:22
I’m 62 and always thought the P&S was a bunch of hooey. I read an article last year about the technique. The author said to, “look around the room, pick out a target and point at it. Now look down your finger and see where it’s pointing.” I did this many times and found out my index finger points/aims directly at the target every time. I took it to the range at 5-7 yards and found the accuracy uncanny. Say what you want. . . I’m a full believer.
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John M. Buol Jr.
Feb 10, 2016 @ 11:24:24
>> “look around the room, pick out a target and point at it. Now look down your finger and see where it’s pointing.” I did this many times and found out my index finger points/aims directly at the target every time.
At room distances at relatively large objects with a very crude, unverified alignment (your finger didn’t launch a projectile or have zeroed sights) I imagine it appeared to line up fine.
>> I took it to the range at 5-7 yards and found the accuracy uncanny.
Give specifics about your “uncanny” results.
A good pistol shooter can hit a one-inch target at seven yards from standing unsupported slow fire, which will appear as a one hole group with centerfire pistol calibers after five shots. This translates to about a four-inch group at 25 yards. Pretty good, but hardly strange or mysterious, especially in an unsettling way
8.5 inches at 7 yards is 121.4 minutes of angle. A humanoid silhouette 19 inches across the shoulders is over 271 MOA wide at the same distance. Given such vast real estate, alignment error is hardly the problem so point shooting works good enough.
Try this: Set up three sheets of Letter-size (8.5×11) paper seven yards away and at least two yards edge-to-edge. Starting with the pistol how you choose to carry in public, start a timer (or buddy with a whistle and stop watch) and engage each sheet with two shots. Run this twice, once going right and once going left. The exercise is a fail if either string goes over four seconds and if any of the twelve shots misses paper.
Four second par give 1.5 seconds for a presentation and 0.5 seconds per shot, a reasonable and realistic time frame to work in. Letter-size paper at seven yards is a fair target and distance. Let us know how “uncanny” your results are when pressured in a reasonable and realistic time frame, preferably with a video demonstration.
Some defensive shooting advocates would label such an exercise a “circus trick.” It’s supposed to be easy and repeatable. That’s the point. A simple time pressure exercise to demonstrate basic fundamentals are in place.
The real problem why people miss such large targets under stress despite demonstrating “uncanny” ability to do so on the range or during routine qualification is the inability to maintain even gross alignment while pressured to shoot a bit fast or under a little stress. Low skill shooters pass overly-easy instruction and qualifications, fail to identify problems such as flinching, never refine gun handling under time pressure, never learn or test skills beyond introductory levels, then wonder why they can’t perform under pressure real world.
This problem doesn’t reveal itself until a stress event occurs, and the person actually cares about the result and getting better. For those lacking competition experience or some other metric where skills are actually measured under time and other pressure, that fight caught on the dash cam was the person’s first stress shoot. Hence the poor results. Pretending point shooting is a solution just wastes time.
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Guy Keys
Feb 11, 2016 @ 20:08:46
I was taking inside 7 yards. No statement was made concerning precision target shooting. Just self-defense. At 7 yards it seems nothing special to keep rounds in the chest. As with anything. . . You perform like you train.
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John M. Buol Jr.
Feb 11, 2016 @ 20:15:00
I noticed you didn’t give any specifics about your “uncanny” results.
>> At 7 yards it seems nothing special to keep rounds in the chest.
Agreed, as I already stated. Merely hitting a very large target up close under no time pressure or other stress is not, and never has been, the problem.
>> As with anything. . . You perform like you train.
Agreed, as I already stated. Failing to take time pressure into account means you’re training to perform slowly. This will become a problem if ever pressured to perform quickly.
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