Yes...you should have trigger time for fast fire practice. You'll have to strive towards your failure point. If all your shots in the string hit the target and you're looking around to see other shooters still shooting their string --- you are not reaching your failure point --- so you'll have to speed up a bit. If some are your shots in the string are not hitting the target...you'll have to slow down.
When the subconscious is trained to pull the trigger...all the shooter has to do is aim the sights in relation to firearm use.
Fast fire requires breathing in spurts between shots or shot strings. But remember too breathe...so you don't pass out!
"Two shots in two seconds --- hitting the heart, bullet holes touching each other --- is effective --- But six shots in two seconds...bullets hitting in a combat effective torso zone --- Both are effective...but one is obviously a lot more efficient."
quote: Travis Haley -- The Art of the Tactical Carbine - Volume II
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That rifle hanging on the wall of the working class flat or labourer's cottage is the symbol of democracy. It is our job to see that it stays there."
--- George Orwell
Last edited by Erno86; February 8, 2016 at 04:11 PM.
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