KR Training April 2012 newsletter

KR Training’s April 2012 newsletter is up.

In addition to normal schedule updates, there’s a couple cool things.

1. Skill Builder. A new mini course to allow you the ability to practice and improve on certain skills at whatever level you’re at. A useful class because you can work on skills you learned in prior classes under the watchful eye of an instructor, plus be able to do skills that you may not be able to perform at other ranges.

2. Take Your Daughter To the Range Day

KR Training is participating in the national Take Your Daughter to the Range Day event. Come on out!

 

6 stupid gun myths – debunked

The lists over at cracked.com can be hit or miss, but  here’s one that strikes the bullseye.

6 Stupid Gun Myths Everyone Believes (Thanks to Movies)

#6 – Dropped guns go off

No, they don’t. Well sure, anything mechanical can fail, and there are some types of guns that are not drop-safe. But on the whole, today’s modern guns are drop-safe and will not go off if dropped.

So folks… if you drop a gun, let it fall. Do NOT try to catch it, because that tends to end up with fingers pressing triggers… and then yes, it will go off.

#5 – Ceramic guns are a thing

No, they’re not.

#4 – Bullets make everything spark.

No, they don’t. But Hollywood needs that drama so you can know there’s a gunfight going on.

It’s kinda like the way Hollywood portrays suppressors… sorry, “silencers” as making no noise at all, but they dub in that “thwap” sound because we need some sort of noise to know it was making no noise, right?

#3 – Shotguns are room-clearing murder factories

I’ve addressed this many times on my blog (use search feature). They don’t spray clouds of death. You do have to aim shotguns.

#2 – Deadly on the gun range = deadly in real life

Nope. Cardboard doesn’t shoot back, and the stress/pressure is never going to be the same.

#1 – Bullets turn people into pulp

Not even a little bit. Check this FBI report on a police shootout (contains some autopsy photos). 107 rounds fired (.40 S&W, .223 Hornady TAP), and he was far from pulp. In fact, read through that whole report as it’s rather telling about the realities.

Determined individuals can sustain many gunshot wounds in areas that produce great pain and continue to fight a long time, even without the aid of drugs or alcohol.

AAR – BP2 & DPS1 @ KR Training, 14 April 2012 (or “your gear sucks”)

I love being a teacher. If there’s anything I’ve learned over my lifetime, it’s that teaching is something I’m to do. I don’t attest to be the best, and I know there’s much to learn both about what I teach and how to teach. But I’m thankful for the opportunities I have to teach.

And so, another weekend out at KR Training with Basic Pistol 2 in the morning and Defensive Pistol Skills 1 in the afternoon. The weather was gorgeous, a good breeze all day (due to being on the southern tip of the storms that rolled through the midwest this past weekend), just a fine day to be outside.

I also got to meet Mr. & Mrs. Groundhog. Mrs. Groundhog was coming as a part of her winning the “A Girl And Her Gun” contest, and I was honored they chose us and that I got to be a part of her journey. I wish I could have chatted more with them that day (busy day!), but we did get to chat some and they were good folk. I look forward to seeing them again in the future, and reading their AAR of their range day.

Updated: Their post is up! And I’m a caffeinated squirrel. 🙂

What made it even finer were the students. Basic 2 got off to a rough start, but a lot of that came down to gear. DPS1 had its host of gear problems as well. Most of what I could talk about here is the same stuff that tends to come out of every BP2 and DPS1. Things like slowing down, practicing fundamentals, ball & dummy drill, working on the press out, working on trigger control, do more dry fire and so on (search my site for past articles, if you’re curious). But what really struck me out of the classes was gear, so I’d like to start off by saying:

Yes, your gear sucks.

There, I said it. Deal with it. 🙂

The thing is, you don’t know what you don’t know. So how can you roll into a class and know what gear to have? And you try to take input from sources you consider knowledgable, but the reality is most guys at the gun store, most people on the Internet, most well-meaning husbands and boyfriends… they don’t know, and they don’t know that they don’t know. And don’t take your advice from magazines either, because magazines never give bad reviews because they can’t afford to upset their advertisers.

Consequently, a lot of people start off with crappy gear.

Let’s look at the gun itself. The single-most important thing in choosing a gun is ensuring the gun fits you. The biggest, baddest gun in the world that you can’t shoot properly is useless. It always happens in class… we’ll see a person with small hands, typically a lady, that brings out a box with the words “Sig Sauer” on it. As soon as we see that, we know what’s going to happen — we’re going to lend her one of our guns. Why? Because Sig’s are HUGE. They have really big grips, they have a DA/SA trigger, which means a really long and heavy trigger … and that person with the little hands won’t be able to get their finger properly on the trigger let alone press it well. And usually, the Sig will be chambered in .40 S&W, so couple that sharp, snappy recoil with a gun they can barely hold on to, and it’s a recipe for disaster. We lend them one of our guns, and by the end of class they are more than happy to sell their Sig (good thing they have good resale value). What gun do we lend them? Sometimes it’s our personal carry gun that we have on our hip (e.g. S&W M&P9), but we’ll actually look at the person and their situation and find something in the safe that’s appropriate for them. For example, one lady in this past BP2 we lend a 9mm 1911 to because it had very thin grips and a short trigger, and it worked so much better for her than the big chunky Glock she came with.

Then there’s the whole “little lady, you need to shoot an airweight J-frame” crapola. We do our best to steer beginners away from that situation.

We also find that people shoot a lot better with full-sized guns, especially when you’re learning fundamental skills. Yes that Glock 26 might be good for concealed carry, but you should first get a Glock 17 or 19 and learn good fundamentals and shoot well with it. I went down this road when I started, first buying a subcompact then Karl showing me the error of my ways… when I got a full-sized gun, things were so much better and I was able to learn without fighting the gun and the quirks of small guns. If you’re a beginner, or someone willing to “start over” and learn things right, then don’t buy a gun because you want to carry it; first buy a gun that you can learn to shoot well on, then once you can shoot well, you can look at other options.

Gun fit matters. A lot. If you can shoot it, if you can hit what you’re shooting it, if it’s not painful to shoot it, if you even end up having a lot of fun and success in your shooting… gosh, you might just want to keep shooting, you might just want to practice more, you might end up getting really good, and it might end up building up those skills that one day save your life.  Read this article on choosing a handgun; it’s a sensible take on what really matters.

After fit, I’d say keeping it mechanically simple is good. Simplicity is important, says me the engineer. The more dohickies, gizmos, latches, levers, buttons, switches, and other things you have to deal with, the more things you have to deal with, and the more things that can break and go wrong. Striving to have something as simple as it can be, but no simpler, is really the best when it comes to mechanical items. DA/SA guns have lots of mechanical mechanisms to have to deal with. Decockers add a bunch to the mix. Even thumb safeties — especially when you don’t NEED them, add so much to the mix. Sure a 1911 needs a thumb safety, but why do so many modern striker-fired guns have them as some added gizmo? I know… because some government or agency contract wanted them, and people buy them, but truly what good reason is there for the extra complexity? One lady in DPS1 had a Walther PK380 and oh… I can’t take that gun seriously for personal defense, and least of which is because it’s a .380 Auto. The thumb safety is difficult to operate with your thumb, and how in the world are you supposed to operate that magazine release “lever” under stress or with one hand? We also couldn’t figure out how to decock it as it didn’t have a decocking lever… but I read now that the way you’re to do it is to engage the safety lever then pull the trigger… holy shit! If that’s not a huge safety risk I don’t know what is. By the end of class this lady was shooting alright, but there’s no question the gun itself was holding her back because it was just too much poorly-designed stuff to deal with.

Then there’s other gear. The biggest? Holsters. You’re unlikely to find a good holster in a local store. Maybe you’re lucky and able to, and boy do I keep thinking about opening a gun store in town that only stocks good stuff… but I’d probably be out of business because people don’t know what’s good nor what’s bad, until them come out and shoot a more serious class like what KR Training provides and really put gear through its paces. Maybe KR Training should just have a pro-shop on site…. 😉  And it’s not just holsters for you gun, but magazine pouches too (you don’t need nor want covers on them; covers have a place but generally private citizens don’t need them).  If you want a short-list of people that make stuff we like: Comp-Tac, Raven Concealment, Blade-Tech, all make good stuff. I’ve not personally tried Kolbeson Leatherworks‘ stuff yet, but I’m wanting to (and he’s local).

And the list can go on.

Yes folks, equipment matters. Do not be caught up in ego here. Ego will get you hurt or killed, or at least hold you back. If you are fighting your equipment, get rid of it. And yes, you might have to go through a few guns and a ton of holsters before you find what works. That’s life… guns and ammo are cheap, life is not. I guess it just comes down to how much you value your life.

But anyways… once we got the gear straightened out for folks, we did have great classes. Students were good, shooting really well, you could see lightbulbs going on and people improving as the class went on. I hope to see the students back for future classes, as there’s still much to learn. And meeting and working with Mrs. Groundhog was the icing on the cake for the day. Practice well!

M&P Shield – got to play with one!

OO… how timely.

Reader and friend Tim picked up an M&P Shield this morning. The store was near to my house, he had read my earlier posting, and on his way home he stopped by my house to let me check it out.

First, THANK YOU, TIM! 🙂

So how was it?

Wow. I’m impressed!

And I just realized, I should have taken some pictures, especially comparing it to a full-sized M&P9. Oh well.

It’s small, it’s slim. I still say a J-frame wins out in terms of “discrete”, but this still slipped into the large-ish pockets on my shorts just fine (with the flush magazine). Even with that “1.5 stack” magazine, it’s still very slim.

I had Youngest put his hands on it, since he’s got the smallest hands in the household (for now). He was able to get all fingers on there and get a good grip. Plus, his finger went into the trigger guard just fine. I do think this could be a winner for people with very small hands.

But the trigger… oh the trigger. It’s horrible! 🙂  Whereas the regular M&P’s trigger is typically described as spongy, this is not. In fact, it’s VERY hard. There’s some take-up, then you hit this “wall”… press harder, harder… and then it just breaks and slams all the way to the rear (a long distance, for a trigger, to travel). And yes, there’s a very tactile reset. The reset point and the “wall” are at the same place, so I can only assume the change in the trigger feel is because of whatever changes they made to give it a reset you can feel. Doing a bunch of dry work with it, the trigger started to feel less rough, but it still has that big “wall” to it. I do wonder what Apex Tactical will be doing. I’m sure the #1 most popular booth at the NRA Show will be S&W with people trying out the Shield, then immediately heading over to #2 Apex Tactical to ask about improving that trigger. 🙂

Field stripping, most of the internals look about the same or as you’d expect them to change. We tried to look at the trigger without a full disassembly but couldn’t see much that was different… tho in the return spring there seems to be some sort of column/shaft that runs up the spring. Not sure what that’s about.

Reloading was difficult, because it’s so small, so slim, there’s no magwell. But you can do it and with some practice I got better.

Sights… they’re the factory 3-dots, not great, but I still say some of the better factory sights out there. Comparing to the Dawson Precision sights on my full-size, a rough comparison looks like no, these sights would NOT just fit onto the Shield. But it seems similar enough that I can’t imagine Dawson couldn’t start with the CNC templates for the full-size M&P and just make some slight adjustments.

I’m totally impressed.

Sure the trigger isn’t awesome, but for most people I’m sure they’ll never know. It’s serviceable, just not awesome, and I would expect Apex to have a trigger kit sooner or later to help smooth it out and improve the feel.  But other than that, changing the sights, wow… I’m impressed with it. Of course, I could only dry fire it and poke at it, I am very curious to know how it shoots, how controllable it is, and so on, before I’d recommend it to folks. But I will predict this is a HOT seller for S&W… tho I think that’s a pretty safe and easy prediction to make. I mean, all the features it has, it’s an M&P, it seems well-thought-out, seems to perform well given other reports I read online. And if it proves to be as reliable as the rest of the M&P line well… when you couple that with a $400-ish price point, how can you beat that?

Yes, I might actually buy one for myself.

M&P Shield

Everyone is buzzing about the new M&P Shield.

I’m sure more information will come out as the NRA Show starts today and runs through the weekend. I’m sure it will be the #1 product everyone will talk about and want to handle on the show floor.

I will admit, I find it intriguing and would love to get my hands on one, not necessarily to buy, but to test and evaluate. Why? Because of the form factor. I’m thinking about people with smaller hands, and if it might fit the bill for those people.

Over at KR Training, when we’re teaching new students in the Basic Pistol 1 class, a large point of that class is to let students try a bunch of different guns, see what they like, and more importantly, learn about gun fit. While they get to try a lot of different guns in the class, there’s no way we can demo every gun that’s out there, even the smaller subset of good guns (sorry, we don’t promote crappy guns). So the best thing we can do is arm the student with knowledge so when they go to the store they are able to make better decisions about what to buy and what not to buy. But of course, having some direct knowledge of specific makes and models goes a long way.

The way the striker guns are going, it’s big fat double-stack magazines and thus grips, and people with smaller hands tend to have a rougher time. So we tend to have to point those people towards 1911’s or the few good single-stack semi-autos like Kahr’s. Not that that’s a bad thing, but due to their hands it just forces them into a realm with fewer choices. That’s not always great because you want folks to have a solid, proven, modern platform like Glock, M&P, or XD, and while all those models can now change backstraps, sometimes it’s still not enough for those with really small hands. So it was cool to see Springfield make their XD-S, as an XD in a single-stack frame with a very slim and compact profile. And now S&W is putting out the M&P Shield, as a single-stack (well, essentially) in a slim and compact profile. I do find it interesting that Springfield went with .45 ACP and S&W went with 9mm and eventually .40 S&W. And of course, we all doubt Glock will ever do this.

We do generally recommend beginners get larger guns, because they are easier to shoot and are better suited for a beginner to establish the fundamentals of shooting. However sometimes you have to work with what God gave you. I am wondering if this might work out as a gun suitable for filling this niche, or at least giving more options to people in this niche.

As for me, I’m not sure if the reduced size really gains anything for me. I recall comparing my XD-9 subcompact to a J-frame in terms of size/carry comparison, and while of course the XD had greater capacity, the J-frame won out in terms of overall size and ability to be better carried in an NPE. And if I can carry a larger gun, I will, and I do. So I’m not sure this particular gun would work well for me personally, but I would like to know how well it works so we could speak knowledgeably about it to students.

A few other interesting points. I read that there’s a more discernible reset. Hrm… interesting. Sounds like S&W is listening. I wonder what impact this has on Apex Tactical’s business. 😉  And reading Caleb’s review, seeing it keeping to about a 4″ group at 25 yards from a standing hold? That’s pretty good. Could perhaps S&W be quietly addressing the M&P’s accuracy issues?  I’m not sure about the thumb safety… I’d be curious to know if you could honestly leave it turned off and the gun still be usable (e.g. the drop safety doesn’t rely upon it, which it shouldn’t; exactly how does their thumb safety mechanism hook into the action; unlike a 1911 where you gotta use it; etc.).

But the biggest thing? The price point. $449 MSRP is just crazy low price. I’m sure here at first it’ll retail around that price because I’m sure demand will be hot. But that’s some aggressive pricing for the market. I’m sure it’s going to be a big seller.

New shooting glasses

I wear prescription glasses.

When I shoot guns, I wear safety glasses over my prescription glasses. Yes, prescription glasses with polycarbonate lenses offer some level of eye protection from impact, but I don’t consider it adequate — better than nothing, but far from ideal. Reason being, most prescription eye glasses aren’t certified to handle impact, and I don’t really feel like the glasses breaking and potentially making the situation worse. As well, a lot of modern prescription glasses are designed to look good, not to adequately protect. For example, they might be rimless, only being held in by a bit of fishing line. Or the lenses are made very small thus they don’t provide a lot of coverage from the front — no common prescription glasses are going to provide protection from the side, and how many of us have been on the firing line with someone to our left and their ejected brass landing on us? Besides, if say my gun opted to spontaneously disassemble itself, it’s going to be expensive enough to replace the gun let alone a few hundred dollars more to replace my glasses… which I may need in order to drive myself home! I’d rather sacrifice a $10-$20 pair of safety glasses than my prescription glasses. Yes, sometimes when I shoot I just wear my glasses (e.g. when I’m out hunting), but on the whole I prefer to wear safety glasses.

The trouble is, I wear prescription glasses, and most safety glasses are designed for people who don’t wear glasses. *sigh*  You can find inexpensive shop glasses at the hardware that will go over glasses, but they suck… they never fit well, they’re uncomfortable, they fog, they just suck. Better than nothing tho, and I have a couple of pairs because for short-term needs they certainly work or are easy to have on hand for other people to use.

I was happy when, a couple of years ago, I saw these glasses advertised in the NRA Store. I picked up a pair of both the clear and the tinted, and have been using them as my shooting glasses ever since. I’ve been generally pleased with them. I will say they are large, and so they should fit over most glasses and onto most faces. But because they are large, they also may not fit you tight enough. I know around my temple area there’s just enough of a gap… and one time a piece of ejected brass from the guy to my left hit my head JUST right and entered the glasses! That was a bit of a surprise and scary moment. Plus, the tinting on the lenses has gotten all scratched up… but that’s more my own fault for not putting them into some sort of case. The scratching has gotten pretty bad, and this past weekend I notice one of the stems had a crack in it, so it’s only a matter of time before they fall apart. Time to get new glasses.

Of course, my initial reaction was to go back to the NRA Store and pick up the same, but… there’s got to be something else out there. I don’t feel like going the prescription route because honestly, it’s too expensive for me to try to maintain multiple expensive sets of prescription glasses as the prescription changes over the years. So, cheap “overs” will have to do.

But I found this: Safety Glasses USA and they have a whole section for over-the-glasses safety glasses!

Multiple models, styles, tints, sizes, features. Quite a nice selection.

I’m going to order their “Guardian Pro Over-The-Glass Safety Glasses with Gray Anti-Fog Lens”. It comes in three sizes: medium, medium-large, and large. I don’t know which will fit me best, so I’m going to order all three. I will pick the smallest one that works. I want to have it as tight as possible to my head so that 1. it minimizes chances for something to get in there, 2. I don’t look like a giant bug. 🙂

FWIW, I’m chosing that particular model because 1. they go over the glasses, full coverage on all sides, 2. they have tint, so should be nice on sunny Texas days, 3. anti-fog is useful, because we’ll sweat a lot on those sunny Texas days, 4. they appear to be similar to the NRA glasses I currently have in terms of form factor, so they hopefully will fit the same and be about the same level of comfort.

When I get them in, I’ll of course try things out and give a further review here.

 

DeSantis Clip-Grip – second impressions

I got to shoot my S&W 442 with the DeSantis Clip-Grip this past Saturday while out at KR Training.

Click here to read my first impressions.

The main thing I wanted to do was shoot the gun with those grips to see how it fared.

It went about as I expected.

You can’t get a great grip on the snub with these grips because they’re small. But you can get enough of a grip that you can shoot, and shoot I could. I could do some slow fire and nail the small steel plate at about 20 yards, once I figured out the hold-under for the load I was using.  I shot some of my .38 Special 158 grain handloads, and I also shot some Remington R38S12 .38 Special +P 158 grain stuff. Everything went about as I expected it would. You feel it, the +P of course stings a bit more, nothing I’d want to shoot a few hundred rounds of, but I can certainly practice with the plinking loads well enough and shoot enough of the carry loads to get by. It’s not horrible, but not the more pleasant thing in the world.

I didn’t really notice much difference between this and the factor boot grips. I expected maybe a little more felt-recoil, and perhaps there was on a meter, but nothing I could really notice.

The one kicker? I didn’t try a full draw as I’m not ready to do that (I like my femoral artery), but I have been working on the draw dry at home. When drawing, due to the way you have to get a “grip” on the gun to draw it, you don’t get a nice “choked up grip” on the gun… you’re a little down the back of the grip. I tried shooting from this grip and it works but it’s not ideal because of course after the first shot the gun now torques back and nestles into that “choked up” position… but now everything has changed, different sight picture, the gun and grip have shifted… not ideal. There may be a different way to draw to mitigate this. I’ll have to experiment.

All in all, I’m alright with these grips. I’m going to keep them on my 442 and see how it goes. If nothing else, they don’t really change the form factor all that much from the regular boot grips, and it gives me options.

Been there, done that

Sammy DeMarco, a student at Eastern Michigan University, writes about his change of heart:

Concealed weapons should be allowed on campus. There, I said it. After years of believing weapons should not be allowed on university property, I have flipped my position. I can no longer find a valid reason as to why law-abiding citizens who attend and work at Eastern Michigan University or any university campus should be left defenseless.

I know where Sammy is coming from. I too flipped my position some years ago. I gave up on my ignorance and my emotion, and looked at logic. I was convinced by logic because well… some things are just hard to defend, once you take your fingers out of your ears.

The EMU Public Safety folks are some of the most professional authorities I’ve encountered. I have no doubt they are highly capable of handling a situation similar to what happened last week at Oikos. But we cannot expect police to be on every corner, in every parking lot and every classroom every minute….

Many students live off campus, have night classes and walk home. We regularly receive emails and texts alerting us that yet another classmate was robbed or assaulted while walking home.

So, not only are citizens not allowed to defend themselves while on campus, they are left defenseless going to and coming from the university, too.

We don’t deny that police and other people whose job it is to “bring safety” can do their job, but the reality is they can’t always be around to do their job. Look around right now… is there a police officer within arms reach of you? And is that police officer always there? If the fact we have police is sufficient to stop people from being assaulted or mugged, then why do we have so many assaults and muggings? Obviously having a police force is not sufficient to get the job done.

Consider where people live vs. where they work or go to school. Maybe we can have useful tools at our disposal at some time, but then due to certain laws we cannot. Why should law-abiding citizens have to reduce their ability to stay safe? Isn’t the general argument towards increasing safety? So how is telling that 5′ 4″ 105# woman she cannot have a gun to fend off a rapist or crazed ex- going to make her any safer? Restraining orders are just pieces of paper and really don’t stop people hell-bent on doing evil. So why should she have to choose between her personal safety and getting an education?

I realize many people will say we need stricter gun laws, not less strict, to deter crime. That logic goes something like this: We need to restrict law abiding citizens from carrying concealed weapons. This in turn will reduce the crime that criminals commit on those very law abiding folks.

So, out of all the laws criminals break, we think the one law they will obey is not carrying a concealed weapon? I’m having trouble reaching that conclusion.

That’s pretty much the case. In fact, many criminals are repeat offenders. They’re already felons, legally prohibited from having a gun. Yet they do. The law hasn’t stopped them, it won’t stop them (it sure didn’t stop them from committing their original crimes), so the only people abridged and hurt by the law are the law-abiding good people. Why are we doing that? What logic is there, other than perhaps someone having an agenda… or just being ignorant.

Sammy sums it up:

Self defense should go beyond law; it’s a right by nature. Denying someone a right to defend themselves against his or her would-be attackers is immoral. The reasons opponents give for supporting restrictions is not supported by data. The restrictions criminalize the good guys and empowers the bad ones. Police cannot be everywhere at once. Ultimately, there is only one person truly responsible for your safety: you.

That’s the thing. When you look at straight data, it’s there. Oh some will say it’s all statistics that the NRA provided to help further their “bloodbath agenda”. But that’s the funny thing… when folks like Howard Nemerov study data exclusively from anti-gun or neutral sources and the factual data and interpretation of it supports that gun control doesn’t work, how can you continue to argue against the facts? unless you just like to argue or are unwilling to accept the logic, reason, and hard fact.

It took me years to arrive here, but here I stand. It’s time we’re allowed to defend ourselves with more than a pen and a sharp tongue.

Sammy, it took me years to arrive here as well, but here I stand and stand with you. Don’t give up your pen and sharp tongue tho… keep spreading the word.

AAR – BP1 and AT-6 @ KR Training, 7 April 2012 — where I stink up the joint

This day at KR Training was a little different for me.

In the morning, we had Basic Pistol 1, and in the afternoon was AT-6: Pistol Workout.

What made it a little different was in BP1 I got to do a little more teaching in the lecture portion of the class than I have in the past. I’m enjoying that, and the more I get to do it the better I get. The BP1 class was small due to some people withdrawing at the last minute, so we had an especially good teacher-student ratio. More than half the class was women. Because of the smaller class size, we got through things a little quicker than usual and Karl was able to field a lot of questions from the class. It seemed to be a very informative session today, and the students seemed pleased.

But what really made it different for me today was I got to shoot! Instead of assisting with AT-6 I got to shoot AT-6. The class size was small enough and the class content is directed and advanced enough that Karl was able to run things and we all just shoot drills and work on skills. The general design of AT-6 is to work on all those things you hate to do, like 25 yard group shooting, shot calling, one-hand-only shooting, and so on. It really pushes you to your limit.

And oh… I stunk up the joint.

I was very unhappy with my performance. I dropped too many shots, where I shouldn’t.

There’s a part of me that wants to double-check some things with the M&P to ensure it’s good and dialed in correctly, especially with my practice ammo. But I’ll be honest… I’d love to blame things on the gun, to say it’s things like me still getting used to the gun, to the heavier and longer trigger, and all that stuff. And I wouldn’t be surprised if in part that was involved in why I stunk so badly today.

But in the end, it’s not the equipment, it’s the shooter. I know it’s me, and even if it’s things like the trigger or other gun things, it still comes down to me improving my use of the tool, not fixing nor improving the tool itself. The only thing tool-wise I might want to improve is mag pouches. The Blade-Tech dual mag pouch I couldn’t stand… dug into my leg, too close together. I borrowed Tom’s 4-pouch Raven, which was OK but like all Raven products they’re a huge slab of Kydex. I did like how tight to the body the inner pouches were held tho. I’ll probably get a Beltfeed from Comp-Tac one of these days.

I already knew I needed work on one-hand press-outs, especially weak hand. I’ve been focusing a lot lately on weak-hand-only shooting, and when it comes to slow fire I’m fairly pleased with my improvement. But once some time pressure is added, I start dropping shots all over the place. Sure I can do tricks like aiming higher so when I slap the trigger on a WHO press-out the shot still lands within the target zone, but that just masks the problem. But what hit me was how much I need press-out work in general: both hands, SHO, WHO. I’ve been working the press-out in a very slow and smooth way, but it’s too slow. So when I had to speed up to today’s speeds, everything went to crap — too wide a jump from the speeds I’ve been doing to the speed I needed.

I have also noticed that I’m retraining myself on a lot of things. I’m finding the way my eyes are working regarding finding the front sight and the target is changing. Due to all my weightlifting, my grip is MUCH stronger and I find myself wanting to use it, really crushing the gun, but all that grip changing isn’t consistent yet and could even be why I’m mashing the trigger (HULK SMASH!).

I really don’t know exactly why I’m doing all that I’m doing. There’s a lot I’ve been working on, that’s changing, but then also because time is limited some things haven’t been worked on and thus have suffered and regressed. So today was a good diagnostic towards things I need to work on more, but I need to do more to figure out just what the problem is and thus properly correct it.

Lots of 25 yard shooting, and that’s improved, I feel more confident in shooting that slow fire… but then I haven’t done much 3-10 yard shooting for speed and obviously that’s regressed. Lots of slow fire doesn’t require lots of pressing out, and that regressed.  I still need more 25 yard shooting, I still need more slow fire, but I need to not neglect these other areas. And at least more trigger time like that should help me figure out and get over my slapping… stop rushing.

In a side note… the grip texturing on the M&P is great. It actually rubbed me a little raw today in some spots, but it’s not overly rough. I like it better than the XD or XDm grip texture. I don’t think I’ll bother getting any stippling or other texturing work on my M&P. It’s pretty nice as it is.

Well, I’ve got homework to do….