February 18, 2019, 03:52 PM | #26 | |
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As was mentioned earlier there is a difference between target shooting and combat shooting. I frequently shoot at 25 and 50 yards with a handgun but mostly slow fire with the exception of timed/rapid 25yard targets and even then the rate of fire is still sloth-like compared to defensive drills. As to the 25 yard 1.5" guns , they are handguns capable but I feel safe to say very , very few shooters that can do it routinely freehanded. |
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February 18, 2019, 04:06 PM | #27 |
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I'm not sure what you're asking, since time is an issue here, and you didn't mention whether you were shooting under some time constraint, such as you would be in "combat shooting". If you're consistently getting 3 of 4 rounds into the CoM at 25 yards, while rapid firing ,I'd say you're doing well.
If you're asking about target accuracy, though, my standard answer to "what's good" is 3@25. That means a "good" (but not outstanding) shooter can shoot honest and consistent 3" 5-round unsupported groups from a good quality service-sized handgun under no time constraint. Revolver shooters should be able to do this in single- and double-action. Just pick up your gun and shoot your best 5. No "fliers" allowed. That (3@25) might seem like a very high bar for merely "good" to some, but the marksmanship you'll generally see at your local range is downright abysmal. 3@25 it's very achievable with practice, but definitely won't get you to the Olympics. If you want your groups to shrink, use an official NRA 25-yard bullseye target. A silhouette simply doesn't offer a consistent aiming point. And take your time |
February 18, 2019, 04:09 PM | #28 | |
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Also, I'm reasonably certain that all of my handguns can shoot better than I can get them to, so whether they will shoot 1.5 inch groups at 25 yds is largely irrelevant to me. That said . . . Based on what I've seen at my usual range, you're shooting well, or above average. Most people I observe at the range (using them as an "average") can't consistently hit paper at 25 yds, much less keep all their rounds in the black. For myself, I have to say "it depends." If I allow myself an unlimited amount of time (not time limit/clock), and using any gun I desire, such as my GP-100 revolver in SA, I can shoot a 6 shot group in under 6 inches about half the time. Off hand, no rest/bags. Off bags that gun will pretty consistently shoot a bit better, around 4-4.5 inches, with any target loads. With my S&W M&P9 2.0 my best 7-shot group @25 yds was just under 5 inches, but I freely admit that there had to be a fair bit of luck in that group. As an average, the gun with me behind the trigger probably shoots about 7-8 inches, again off hand, with no time limit. However, about half the time I'll shoot a group that stretches to at least 12 inches. Like I said I'm no expert. Of course, this kind of shooting has little to do with a real life defensive shooting scenario, but I feel that shooting longer ranges helps me with trigger control, recoil control, sight picture, etc. Also, it can be very confidence-boosting when you get a better than average group. And fun, of course. As to defensive shooting, a couple years ago I began shooting 12x20 inch steel IPSC silhouettes at both 25 and 35 yards, under time pressure, on the move, from prone/kneeling/standing positions, in low light. About 4-5 times a year. What I found was once I stopped thinking about how far they were, I could consistently get first round hits in 'regulation time' though some hits weren't "center mass." I also found that it actually helped me to shoot faster. In other words, not to try to take time to get a perfect sight picture. "Perfect is the enemy of good," I guess. Now when I shoot faster, my groups at 25 yds on a paper target is definitely a foot or more in diameter, but now the group is usually centered in the 'chest/abdomen' area, so I feel this is an improvement of my earlier attempts two years ago. Sidenote. This may or may not help you in your quest to be more accurate: Draw a one inch square on your target, or several; I usually draw 3 or 4 of them, spaced about 20 inches apart. Set the target at 5 yds and try to shoot 5 rounds into each square, no time limit. If you can pretty consistently put 4 out of 5 rds into each square, move the target out to 7 yds. If you can keep 3 out of 5 rds inside a 1-inch square at 7 yards on a consistent basis, you're a better shot than 90% of the normal shooters out there (excluding people like Jerry Miculek, of course). Then repeat with a 15 second time limit. Regardless, if you can do this, then shooting inside 10 inches at 25 yards should get a lot easier. But like I said at the beginning, you sound like you're doing pretty well. Just keep working on it every once in a while, and keep trying to push your limits and you should see results. |
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February 18, 2019, 06:11 PM | #29 |
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I won't speak to what it takes to be close range accurate in a hurry, there are others much better qualified for that than I. What I can say is that I used to shoot the 200yd gong on the rifle range, for recreation. Off hand, one hand, the classic old time stance with my left hand in my hip pocket.
I could ring the gong with any pistol you give me, after a few sighter shots. And I'd do repeatedly with the guns I was familiar with. Like 5 out of six on average, some guns even better, some not so much. Ordinary service class semis are poor at that game, they just aren't built to be accurate enough, generally. There are exceptions. I used to like bowling pin shooting, had a lot of fun, never was the fastest, but it was fun. Dropping 5 pins with a .44 Auto Mag in 5.36 seconds didn't even place third, time wise, but I figured it was good enough.
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February 19, 2019, 04:01 AM | #30 |
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LE time frames & qualification
My agency firearms quals required 70% across the 30 rd course of fire. If one cleaned the course at 3-7-15 yds, you could be technically "qualified" before you reached the final stage at 25 yds, though you were required to shoot the entire course regardless. I'm proud to say that most of our LEO's that I dealt with over the years were gun savvy and shot well, scores running in 85% range and up. Longuns (rifle and shotgun) had separate quals with different stages.
At the 25 yd line, the 6 rd stage was shot from the classic vertical plank barricade, simulating cover. Time frames and course of fire as best I remember: - On signal, or when targets turn, move 2 paces or so to your barricade, draw (from retention holster) and fire 3 rds from rt. side (6 or 8 seconds?). If on a turning target range, recover to ready pistol and utilize cover. If on fixed target range, cover the target. -On signal or target presentation, from ready pistol, present firearm from the left side of the barricade, fire 2 rds, ( 4-5 secs?). recover to ready pistol, or cover target. -On signal, or target presentation, drop to kneeling on rt side of barricade and fire one round (3 secs) With a squared away crew and shooters that I was familiar with, I'd give one command to engage and allow them to work through the 3 positions and 6 rounds in 13-15 seconds, whatever was spec. We shot the Transtar - II target, the infamous "blue ghost", which sometimes came in when ordered as "green ghosts". |
February 20, 2019, 12:57 AM | #31 | |
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Then again, the distance could have something to do with my developing eyesight issues, who knows. Either way that’s one reason why I recommend to the OP to up the distance. The main reason is it makes you focus on fundamentals of marksmanship. The second reason is it builds confidence when you start to make hits somewhat regularly.
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February 20, 2019, 01:45 PM | #32 | |
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Decades ago I had a friend who was a "natural", and he could DA his S&W M19 and pick the chrome letters F O R D of the trunk of a junk car in less time than it takes you to read this. I was lucky to hit the trunk, DA. SA, I could shoot just as well, but much slower. We were of an age, and I actually had a few years more trigger time than he did, but he was a natural, and made it look easy. My strength turned out to be accurate placement of shots at ranges out to a couple hundred yards, with a handgun. For me, it seemed fairly easy (once I learned the drop of whatever I was shooting) but other people couldn't seem to do it, more than rarely. Never could do very well (shoot decent groups) shooting DA, and fast, or even slow. Shots just seemed to go where ever they felt like. SO, I never put much practice into that. Then just past turning 30, things changed, without me consciously doing anything different. Shooting the same guns, the same way, but out of the blue (so it seemed), the steel plates in my backyard range started going tink, tink, tink, bang tink,tink, and it even got a little better over time. Some people start out learning defensive type shooting, and never go much beyond that. Others start shooting for fun, plinking, target shooting, and some hunting. Some of them learn defensive styles later, some never bother. Some folks mix both. For me, there's more to enjoying handgun shooting than 7 yard drills. A lot more.
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February 20, 2019, 03:00 PM | #33 |
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I was never into this short range combat shooting. I use my pistols and revolvers for target and hunting. I have shot RF & CF silos a good bit. With magnum Revolvers I can hit a 12"
gong at 100yds more times than I miss. I have target guns set up for Bullseye 25' & 50'. I'm going on 69 and ain't near as good as I use to be but claims of SD type handguns that will do under 2" at 25yds need to be taken with a grain of salt. Also a lesson on Feet and yards may help. The average guy isn't going to keep his shots in a plate at 25yds with pistol or 100yds with a rifle. |
February 22, 2019, 12:26 AM | #34 | |
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February 22, 2019, 06:33 PM | #35 |
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I like shooting at 5yd intervals and comparing groups. I'll start at 10yds, then 15, 20, and finally 25. I feel like I do pretty well given the firearms/ammo I use and the fact I haven't been at it for very long(2 years with handguns). 2 hands slow fire, I can put most of a magazine on a paper plate. I always get a couple strays, but out of a 16 or 19 round mag, Im not complaining.
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February 22, 2019, 07:54 PM | #36 |
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Any discipline in shooting can and does produce shooters who can do things that appear magical. There is a video of a cowboy action shooter running through pistol, lever gun and pump gum that is truly amazin. Sorry that I cannot find the link.
Top Bullseye shooter produce amazing sets of shots at distances of 25 and 50 yards. The record for slow fire 20 shots at 50 yards one hand unsupported is 200/200 with 11 Xs. The 20 ring is 3.36” in diameter
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February 22, 2019, 07:54 PM | #37 |
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just wait till you start moving around when you are shooting.
Keep up the good work and don't worry so much about measuring your groups. Just hit the target within an 8" square and be glad. Over time it will get better all by itself. Honestly, my groups have always been a mess and it doesn't bother me one bit. The contest is not likely ever going to be "who has the tightest groups". The bottom line that in a SD event, a hit on target is a hit on target.
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February 23, 2019, 12:10 PM | #38 | |
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If your marksmanship skills are lacking, even under no pressure, they're sure not going to be any better under duress. The idea that you'd be able to consistently hit an 8" target at speed and under stress just because you think you can do it otherwise is a myth. I recall Brian Enos, the great practical shooter, commenting on his book (a "bible" of practical shooting), saying he might've chosen a slightly different title, since "you never really go beyond the fundamentals, you just do them better and faster". |
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February 23, 2019, 03:10 PM | #39 |
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I was a bit younger ;-)
Black target > 20 cm in diameter
German Sig Sauer P226 in 9 mm Drill with 2 mags > focusing on front sight So 2 mags > 28 seconds. |
February 23, 2019, 05:40 PM | #40 | |
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I don't think anyone is suggestion to ignore fundamentals of marksmanship. I suggested he not get all tore up over absolute group sizes. There are a lot of issues that encompass an effective SD system. Marksmanship, Tactics, Strategics, personal fortitude, mental grit, happenstance, Speed, Judgment, training, general fitness, knowledge, experience, adequate/reliable weapon and the list goes on. The sooner someone accepts that it aint all about a 2" group, the sooner they can get to work on a well rounded systems which includes much of what I just mentioned. Can winning the armed conflict you find yourself suddenly thrust into hinge on shooting a 2" group?.. it might. Is it likely to hinge on that? I really doubt it. Its possible that the best absolute marksman wins the day and its just as possible that half a dozen other factors decided the outcome. Being the strongest man in a fight is certainly a bonus but the strongest man does not always win and neither does the guy who can cut a playing card in two with one shot. Sure,.. stress is a monkeywrench and so I shooting on the move or badguys on the move. That was the whole point of mentioning "wait till you are moving and shooting". If he didn't have a decent grasp of basic marksmanship, he wouldn't be shooting as decent as he is currently. He will get better with practice and he will get better with additional training. At this point, I dont think it makes much sense for him to worry about absolute groups and that is all I was trying to convey. He is doing fine and will only get better if he keeps at it. I wouldn't spend too much time with a measuring stick. If you are doing better, you'll know it.
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February 24, 2019, 08:51 AM | #41 |
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As to shooting while moving.... I'm taking a defensive handgun class in two weeks. Shoot from cover, moving, from the ground, getting up while shooting, etc... Should be fun and educational.
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February 26, 2019, 07:58 AM | #42 |
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Can the silhouette target and go to a standard NRA B8 target, you would just need the replacement centers. Start with the 5 shots in 20 seconds and as you improve the speed will come by itself.
It becomes each shot fired deliberately and separately. A take your time quickly thing. |
February 26, 2019, 08:24 AM | #43 | |
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It would also depend on who your asking and how inflated their ego is that particular day. Where do YOU think your skills are? Do YOU want to improve them or maintain them? Benchmarks are great for your own self-diagnostic and as a means to test yourself. They naturally serve as a means to potentially improve yourself if that is what you want. YOU need to decide what YOU want to accomplish. Practical self defense drills with a focus on fast effective hits? Methodical tight groups at longer ranges? Or something in between? All that really matters is what YOU want to accomplish and then getting yourself there. |
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February 26, 2019, 08:53 AM | #44 | |
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Seems these days everyone is a 'combat master' and teaching run & gun courses. Unfortunately many learned their trade by watching YouTube videos. I've been training folks some four decades and I often marvel at the crap I see from others. I'm wavered at our local city range and teach private classes there often, usually only one or two students at a time. I see these clowns on adjacent ranges where they've got a dozen or more at $200+ per and it's utterly FUBAR. I could go on for hours with what I've seen....little to no individual focus, poor technique, no real value, and often dangerous. On the other hand they most often come with a ton of ego, puffing, and blowing of smoke. Be very, VERY, VERY wary! Even many of the big name instructors/classes don't have a lot of value in them, it's simply a business and means to make money for them. There are some good ones, but they are few and far between. I'm being kind when I say maybe one out of a hundred are worth the time & money. Just some free advice to be careful, take it or leave it. |
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February 26, 2019, 09:48 AM | #45 | |
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February 26, 2019, 05:56 PM | #46 | |
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In fact I clearly stated good ones are out there. BTW What exactly does 'qualified' mean? Ive witnessed many a 'qualified' instructor teach bad habits, fail to correct issues, act quite unsafe, etc. Which falls back to my point of being very wary. My personal suggestion is that before anyone pays for a class, ask to watch them instruct another class for maybe half an hour. Sitting back and watching them on the line will usually tell you all you need to know within the first 10-15 minutes. Something else to watch for is class size, large classes are a red flag to being nothing but revenue generation over quality, even if they tout "1 instructor for every x students" or some such (aka 1 'instructor' and a couple of his yuckle-head buddies to make the ratio). My personal opinion is that there are maybe a half-dozen quality instructors that can handle larger class sizes and still provide good value to the student. Look at it this way.... Plop down say $200 for an 8 hour class Show up and there are eight students total That means in a perfect world you might get an hour of one on one Add in breaks, lunch, chalk-talk, etc, and you're paying $200 for maybe 30 minutes of actual one on one time. And often the instructor is still garbage. Buyer beware is all Im saying. |
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February 28, 2019, 01:58 PM | #47 |
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I have several 9mm pistols with red dot sights. I can usually put 15 (of 15) rounds in a six inch target at 25 yards shooting off hand. I usually put 13 to 14 in the six inch target with my SIG p210 Target (US model) and my CZ75 Tactical Sport using iron sights. My results are not always that good. But, on my good days, I'm 80 plus, that's what I expect. I started shooting when I was less than 10, stayed away for years, came back five years ago. Practice regularly, at least once a week. Practice, practice, practice. Serious practice, not just plinking around.
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February 28, 2019, 03:01 PM | #48 |
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Hi nanney1,
Sounds like you are of to a pretty good start, especially for just being a year into the sport. If you are getting on target 4/5 at 25 yards, I suggest you bring the target closer and work your way out. I would skip 3 yards at this point and probably 5 yards as well. I think 7 yards is a good place to start and then move back to 10 and 15 yards. Once you can group fairly consistently, then move on to longer distances. I would also buy a cheap pair of binoculars so you don't have to move the target every few shots. I started typing how I teach friends who have never shot, but found a website that is probably more concise and better written. https://www.pewpewtactical.com/ultim...ol-accurately/ . For me, accuracy comes down to proper stance, proper grip, good sight alignment, controlled breathing, good trigger control. As you get more practice and get more consistent, equipment improvements will help tighten up groups further. I believe that 3 dot sights, preferably fiber optic, are the most precise sights you can use. The next upgrade would be improving the trigger so that it is lighter and smoother. You may not want to do this on your carry gun as some tend to believe an aggressive DA may try and turn a justified shoot into a "bad shoot". A smoother and lighter trigger pull with a nice clean break allows you to isolate the movement to just the trigger, rather than moving the entire gun. Good luck and hope this helps!
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March 9, 2019, 04:54 PM | #49 |
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I shot this group of 10 today. 2 hand hold, unsupported, slow fire at 25 yards. This was done with a sub $300 Sar K2P with a 3.8" barrel and Walmart Federal 115gr fmj. I was pretty happy with it. I don't worry about shooting fast. I figure if I focus on the basics and take my time, I'll get better with the speed eventually.
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March 9, 2019, 05:05 PM | #50 |
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That's too honest of a group. Next time say 50 yd so we know it's internet worthy.
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