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The Range
Firearms Chat
Shoot what you carry, carry what you shoot
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<blockquote data-quote="Defcon Shooter" data-source="post: 2971276" data-attributes="member: 42229"><p>I have found that shooting 124 grain FMJ mostly S&B or Aguila which are pretty close in POI to my carry load of Sig v-crown 124's. However when one increases the range to say 50 or even a hundred yards the natural arc of movement makes way more difference than variations between ball and defensive loading's.</p><p>The one area of training for PDW's that bugs me is the reluctance of folks to incorporate malfunction drills into their training regimen. I can understand if your only shooting option is a public indoor range. However one of the first things I like to do to folks who think themselves urban commandos is slip a couple dummy rounds into their magazines and watch the reaction. It often times takes them completely out of their rhythm. I am lucky along with my wife and adult kids when they visit to have an outdoor shooting area one half mile from our home and the shop. We usually run some kind of practice/training at least once a week. Usually expend 500-800 rounds per week doing live fire. We can drive cars on our range which is really a boon to training for situations that come up in your vehicle. Really want to have fun with someone run a malfunction drill on them by surprise while they are shooting from their car. I think developing the muscle memory and primitive brain capacity to deal with problems is far more important than the difference between shooting walmart Perfecta and Federal HST. With one proviso Don't take that handgun hostage rescue shot with ammo you have not put on paper a lot. That's my opinion take it for what I charged you for it folks.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Defcon Shooter, post: 2971276, member: 42229"] I have found that shooting 124 grain FMJ mostly S&B or Aguila which are pretty close in POI to my carry load of Sig v-crown 124's. However when one increases the range to say 50 or even a hundred yards the natural arc of movement makes way more difference than variations between ball and defensive loading's. The one area of training for PDW's that bugs me is the reluctance of folks to incorporate malfunction drills into their training regimen. I can understand if your only shooting option is a public indoor range. However one of the first things I like to do to folks who think themselves urban commandos is slip a couple dummy rounds into their magazines and watch the reaction. It often times takes them completely out of their rhythm. I am lucky along with my wife and adult kids when they visit to have an outdoor shooting area one half mile from our home and the shop. We usually run some kind of practice/training at least once a week. Usually expend 500-800 rounds per week doing live fire. We can drive cars on our range which is really a boon to training for situations that come up in your vehicle. Really want to have fun with someone run a malfunction drill on them by surprise while they are shooting from their car. I think developing the muscle memory and primitive brain capacity to deal with problems is far more important than the difference between shooting walmart Perfecta and Federal HST. With one proviso Don't take that handgun hostage rescue shot with ammo you have not put on paper a lot. That's my opinion take it for what I charged you for it folks. [/QUOTE]
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