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August 9, 2017, 09:16 AM | #51 | |
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To the OP, train, train, train. Try everything, then try it a fifth time. Find what works best for you, then use it. Take in other people's advice, but don't believe it's the only way to get the job done. You may come up with a grip and stance that is unique to you, no one else uses it. But if it works for you, you're good. |
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August 9, 2017, 10:21 AM | #52 | |
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When I say "typical" I am referring to what is done most often when considering (self defense, fighting) broadly, not narrowly. As I said earlier, I think the square stance is prudent in some limited circumstances. As a general or routine method, I do not.
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Life is a web woven by necessity and chance... Last edited by FireForged; August 9, 2017 at 10:34 AM. |
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August 9, 2017, 12:56 PM | #53 | ||
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August 9, 2017, 01:17 PM | #54 | |
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FireForged, I'm not asking you to explain wormholes in the space-time continuum. I'm just asking to explain what kind of stance you are referring to.
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August 9, 2017, 01:20 PM | #55 | |
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August 10, 2017, 08:52 AM | #56 |
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Once in a while, I shoot with the forward C-clamp... at the range. I'm a civilian also so I have no expert training.
I do shoot with 3 retired Marines, one of them is now a deputy who is younger than me. None of them shoot with this weird C-clamp/thumb over technique. In fairness, I've seen the C-clamp technique many times in 3gun events I go to. It makes for faster transitions in fictional stages. |
August 10, 2017, 11:38 AM | #57 | |
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Putting part of the left hand on top of the barrel does aid in control of the muzzle rise in fully automatic fire. But if you don't have a machine gun much of the rationale for it goes away and if it makes you feel awkward, it may not be improving things. Squaring yourself to the target presents your opponent a larger target. That's okay if you're wearing body armor and the ballistic plates are covering the chest (but not your sides) because you get the benefits of the triangle formed by your arms and chest and the added protection of the vest. But, if you're not wearing a vest, or a helmet, or working for SOCOM, an "old school" stance that presents a smaller target may still be advisable. I'm a Baby Boomer. I was taught to shoot by my grandfather who taught marksmanship to soldiers in World War II, so, yeah, between what he taught me and what the Army later taught me, I am almost certainly "out of date" and my techniques "old school". But, you know what? When I use them, I am using comfortable, well-practiced, well-ingrained techniques that I now naturally assume without having to think about and which allow me to hit the target - - and in the end that's what counts. |
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August 28, 2017, 11:37 AM | #58 |
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One point about Jerry, he can really shoot. And, he practices a lot. With free ammo.
But, he is just different from other people. He has the strength, hand eye coordination, twitch muscles etc all put together the right way to make him an incredible shooter. You can hand me a football and Unlimited time and coaching and, I will not become Roger Staubach. Period. Same with a baseball. I won't be Nolan Ryan. Ever. I physically cannot do what Jerry does with a gun. I also can't be a CPA. Such is life. |
August 28, 2017, 04:55 PM | #59 |
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You guys do know if you are fighting someone who can shoot BACK, and shoot well, standing up using any stance might be very unhealthy.
For competition, well ok, but for when it's real not every opponent is some guy sticking an AK over a sandbag and spraying lead. Deaf
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August 28, 2017, 05:59 PM | #60 | |
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Anyway, you do realize your question is probably more of a rhetorical one, right? Kind of like the exuberant and enthusiastic martial arts practitioners who actually think they'll be able to have a fight stop for the necessary time for them to square up and fight from "stances". Then, they exhibit that puzzled Labrador expression when you try to explain making your "fighting stance" your everyday stance ... thinking it just means a "stance". Then, they act even more puzzled when you try to explain what the word "fight" really means when it's connected to terms like a "knife-fight" or a "gunfight" ... even when they already know (or ought to know) what it means to say "fistfight". That's not usual, though, because there's an awful lot of people (even cat owners) who have never seen a serious cat fight and saw what it really means when someone says, "the fur flies". I remember the first time I saw one occur, late at night under a street lamp, and saw that pair of cats create a veritable whirlwind of cat fur that floated a few feet up in the air, and made a pretty respectable cloud a few feet all around them. It made me think of the Tasmanian Devil cartoon.
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Retired LE - firearms instructor & armorer Last edited by fastbolt; August 28, 2017 at 06:25 PM. |
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August 28, 2017, 05:59 PM | #61 |
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Deaf.. many people draw some sort of equivalence between gun games and combat training. To them, its the same.. so if its good for running a stage it must be good in a real application.
I will always train in a manner which is conducive to getting small behind a rifle. Others can practice the tactical kabooki dance of their choice, its fine by me.
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August 28, 2017, 06:33 PM | #62 |
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Nobody has suggested competition and fighting are equivalent. Are you intentionally misinterpreting what has been said to create a strawman or have you just not read or understood what you read?
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August 28, 2017, 06:45 PM | #63 |
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My comment does not represent anything that has been said, it was intended to reflect upon the competition reference that Deaf made. He seemingly suggested that he understood its use in comp. My comment simply highlights the spirit of why "some" people seem to accept is broadly as a good method. I simply agree with Deaf in that I "get it" as a comp style but I only support its use in very limited circumstances as a real life SD consideration.
As you can see by my post count, I don't comment much. I have no desire to cook up meaningless hubbub.
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August 28, 2017, 07:02 PM | #64 | |
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If someone is shooting at you, any number of things you do might be unhealthy. If you stand up and move you might get shot. If you take cover, you may lose sight of your attacker and get shot (remember the Dallas police officer who crowded the column he was hiding behind and was outflanked and killed after his standing, moving attacker shot him with a rifle at close range?). From kneeling or prone, you much reduce the area you can observe and being able to know where your attacker is at is critical information. The urge to avoid incoming fire can make you lose situational awareness in a way that can be very deadly. At the same time prone, and less so kneeling, reduce what you can observe off of a nicely mown range with a slightly elevated firing line, they also increase the amount of time it takes to move or change positions. The closer your attacker is, the less team support you have, the more you must be aware of attacker location and be able to move quickly in response. Does that mean you should never go prone or kneel? Of course not. Just like natural point of aim and skeletal support are still important for good long range accuracy. But realistically, defensive use of a rifle is likely to be dynamic, take place at less than 50m (and probably a lot closer than that), and you probably won't be maneuvering as part of a team - so you will be forced to be both maneuver element and base of fire. It would be great to have a discussion of WHEN certain techniques should be used or what type of tactics they support instead of the same brain-dead repetitive conversations over and over again. |
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August 28, 2017, 07:30 PM | #65 |
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Tell us how you really feel, Bart. Good lord get over your self.
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August 28, 2017, 07:35 PM | #66 |
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I guess he really likes the square stance
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August 28, 2017, 10:11 PM | #67 |
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Well FB, lucky for me the storm is below us! But I'm a Red Cross as well as Knights of Columbus member and we are now gearing up for receiving people who got out. Then, when it's over, we will do damage assessment (and Houston will be just one HUGE damage assessment!)
As for the 'stance' part, I understand the different stances might bring better hits (kind of like John Wick's stuff... if one believes his suit is that bulletproof.) But the thing is while I do study stances (especially karate ones) I do understand that once the fur flies lots of those stances will be very heavily modified. Didn't mean to step on your toes Bartholomew. Long time ago in Karate and IPSC I was what they called a 'technical' fighter. Since no one was really trying to kick or punch me (nor shoot at me in IPSC) then things like stances or 'splits' or pivots just meant lots to me. Later as I got older and had some fun in Krav Maga, IDPA, and taught CHL classes, I gravitated more toward viewing things from a more hostile environment lens. If you view lots of YouTube Afghanistan and Iraq footage you will see once the ranges decrease the GIs start hugging ground and not exposing themselves much. I mean they really don't want to get shot, armored or not. They only use 'stances' when they have lots of buddies to cover all the angles. Just to dangerous otherwise. So while I keep up on the stances, both pistol and rifle, I find old WW1 and two stuff, like prone and kneeling from behind cover, more realistic (and wise.) Deaf
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August 28, 2017, 10:35 PM | #68 |
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Stay well and safe while helping out, Deaf.
Lots of folks overlook that stances primarily, in the arts, serve as teaching and practice tools. They can help someone achieve a better balanced normal way of standing and between moving, and they're great for learning new things, but it's important for more advanced practitioners to reach the point where they realize that "stances" ... especially done from a static position ... are more of a way to begin/end fluidly transitioning when out in the dynamic world of movement and danger. I reached a point as a firearms instructor, which was only my secondary responsibility, where I evolved to apply the lessons (learned in the arts) of balanced fluidity with optimal positioning (stances), while using short and long guns. The older you get, the more it all starts to look alike and blend together, right? Too bad it usually doesn't start out that way.
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Retired LE - firearms instructor & armorer Last edited by fastbolt; August 29, 2017 at 11:39 AM. |
August 29, 2017, 07:20 AM | #69 | |
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Putting aside the issue of whether the Youtube video you see shows people static because that is when they have time to film stuff and/or bodycam/helmetcams of moving people make for shaky, unwatchable video, where are you going with that? I'm going to assume those guys know what they are doing and are in a static position for a good reason. Are we going to discuss what conditions lead to choosing a static position over a mobile one in an infantry context and then relate that to a non-infantry situation? That would at least be a different conversation than the usual "Why is he putting his arm out so far?" that started this (and that ended up the same way as the last 20 times that conversation has been had anywhere else on the Internet complete with "tactical kabuki" phrase and all the usual dojo posturing that predates the Internet by decades). |
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