A Long Day at the Range

I spent all of yesterday at KR Training helping with classes.

Three classes were being run: Basic Pistol 1, Defensive Pistol Skills 2, and AT-1A Low Light Shooting.

BP1

I think I enjoy the Basic Pistol classes the most. The teacher in me has always been drawn to beginners. When I taught Kuk Sool, I enjoyed working with  white and yellow belts and often was the designated “go-to” man for doing introductory lessons. When I was teaching kids in Cub Scouts or Boy Scouts, it was great to work with kids just learning the basics. If you can help people lay a good foundation, they’ll have something solid to build upon, so beginner stages are very important.

There were a wide range of people in the class, from young college students to an old grandmother… probably in her 70’s or 80’s (she was a hoot). Men and women, various ethnicities (black, white, Asian). I always point this out about the BP1 classes because people like to stereotype gun owners as old white male knuckledragging rednecks, and it’s simply not the case as the composition of these classes demonstrate.

The class ran well, people had fun. We’ll see where they go from here.

DPS2

Defensive Pistol Skills 2 is a recent addition to the course catalog, building upon the skills in DPS1. Skills such as reloads, dealing with malfunctions, moving and shooting, basic use of cover/concealment.  Class started a little slowly as we had to bring people onto the same page, but in the end it worked well. There was some discussion on reloads and it’s something I’ll talk about in another posting. All in all, people did alright.

The real fun part of the class is what’s done at the end. There’s a scenario set up (akin to an IDPA/IPSC) that folks got to run through. There was also a course of fire shot for score. The score doesn’t truly amount to anything more than showing you where you lie in your skills and what you may need to work on.

Big things to take from this course: you don’t want to get too close to cover, get the gun in play and keep it in play, slow down and get good hits.

AT-1A

Foo.c came out for this course. I didn’t get to talk with him much since he was in class and I was helping run things. This is always a fun and informative class because shooting in the dark is fun. You get to see how much muzzle flash your ammo makes, you get to play with toys like flashlights and lasers. And for many, this is the first time they have to do some stuff that does not involve shooting but just using their head. I remember the first time I did that scenario and what a sobering experience it was. The bottom line: is it worth dying for?

Other Stuff

As expected, I saw a lot of the same people I see at these events, which is always good.

I also got to meet a couple people.

I got to meet RevolverRob. Nice guy (tho his girlfriend needs a better car *grin*). Rob did pretty well. He was a little slow moving at the start of drills in DPS2 (i.e. you gotta pick up your feet and move, draw faster, shoot faster… this is your life in the line!). But he did soon find his feet and as the day wore on he really picked up and was shooting well: you could see the improvement in how he was addressing the drills and in the holes on the paper. Yeah he kept missing one steel plate as we ran through a scenario in AT-1A, but that’s OK because it served as a teachable moment. If I remember correctly, he was using the Harries technique and it just wasn’t working because it was shadowing his front sight instead of illuminating it. When he repositioned to use a cheek/neck index (what KR prefers), the sights were properly illuminated and the steel plate went ping. Rob, you did well in class and it seems it was a good day for you.

I got to meet Leslie Buck. I knew he had been coming to KRT for firearms training, and so I was hoping to run into him sooner or later. So there I was in the classroom, this man walks in with a Pekiti Tirsia Kali t-shirt on, he introduced himself and I must admit… I got a little giddy inside. 🙂 It was very much my pleasure to meet him. What impressed me so much was his attitude. He was so kind, nice, humble, courteous. The man had no (evident) ego. He came with a mindset to learn. You could see it when he was on the line: warrior mindset, student mindset. He’s not a bad shot either, just needs to send that new XD off to Springer Precision. 😉  I asked about training Kali/Silat with him, and while due to logistics I cannot train with him on a regular basis, I’m more than welcome to come to various seminars and such that he puts on. I’m certainly looking forward to such things as my schedule permits.

I also got to shoot some .38 defensive ammo in low light to check out the flash signatures. Unfortunately we ran out of time and I wasn’t able to run everything I brought, but we ran CorBon DPX 110 grain, Buffalo Bore 158 grain LSWC (20/20c), and Federal Premium Nyclad 125 grain. All 3 certainly had ample muzzle flash, but to our surprise the Buffalo Bore exhibited the least flash of the 3: we expected it to have the most. I would say the Federal had the most flash, the CorBon in the middle. We tried to capture it on film but not a lot made it… it’s just tough to time it. I did want to try Gold Dot 135 grain but didn’t get a chance too. RevolverRob offered up some Remington R38S12 but again no time…. that I would have been very curious to see. My guesses would be the Gold Dot would have very low flash and the Remington would be rather visible since it’s just “Remington Express”.

A good day. Long day. But a good one. Weather was gorgeous. I can’t complain.

7 thoughts on “A Long Day at the Range

  1. We’re hoping to trade that car at the beginning of the year for a new Ford Fiesta, but we have to wait out Ford for that. I did get the car to start about five minutes later (thankfully), it’s a frustrating vehicle, only some of the time.

    On the flashlight technique, yes I was using Harries at first and I really seemed to find it working okay when stationary, behind cover. The neck index, I switched to about half way through trying to hit the plate and still wasn’t having much luck. Finally, I indexed more at ear level and saw the front sight and bing, the plate rings. I will experiment more dry at home and see what comes of it. One thing is for sure, you cannot rely on what you ~think~ is the front sight to hit. Front sight, front sight, front sight, press, front sight, it’s a mantra that I was ignoring.

    -Rob

  2. Man I’m sorry I missed it. I have to agree about BP1. I really enjoy the beginner classes. Nothing makes me smile as much as a new shooter grinning after discovering just how easy and how much fun shooting is.
    Anyway, greetings from Raleigh!! Having wonderful time, wish I was there!

  3. I swear I commented on this earlier. Yes the car needs to be replaced, I thank the genius GM engineers who thought up an anti-theft system and part design that is junk. Come on the car is a 2004 it shouldn’t suffer from problems like this. Still it gets better gas mileage than my Mustang, but isn’t as reliable, despite being a decade newer. Oh well hopefully a new Ford Fiesta will make its way into the parking spot and I can forget the Saturn experience ever happened…

    I digress. I was using the Harries technique initially for the house. I found it seemed to work better in conjunction with cover, at first. Once I realized that I wasn’t getting good hits, because I couldn’t see the front sight, I realized I needed to change methods. The neck index worked okay for me, but now I realize that I need it slightly higher around ear level (or high cheek level), to get a good crisp view of the sights. I don’t know why this is, maybe, because my gun has a higher bore axis or taller sights? None the less, with this “ear index” height I get a great view of the sights and target, bing the plate goes down, it just seems to work.

    Hopefully, I will get to play with these techniques some more. I hope to do another Low Light class, it was certainly illuminating (bad pun).

    -Rob

    • Well, Saturn is going away completely due to all the failed auto-industrry problems. So you won’t have to worry there. 😉

      You can even work on the low light stuff at home. Dry fire practice. Empty the gun, draw the shades, turn off the light, and see what you can do. Unfortunately, it’s probably the only way you can get regular practice with it because I don’t know of any ranges around here that will let you practice beyond sundown (indoor ranges not included since they’re always lights on). Just make sure to warn anyone else in the domicile first. 🙂

    • BTW, it looks like you did comment on it earlier… for some strange reason the comment got caught in the spam filter (which I just cleaned out). It’s strange that it flagged you as spam even tho you are an approved commenter and all your posting info was the same). Odd.

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