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Resistance See other Resistance Articles Title: 4 Firearms Myths That Bad Guys Believe And You Shouldn’t 4 Firearms Myths That Bad Guys Believe And You Shouldnt By David Morris & Ox Ox here with 4 myths about firearms accuracy that bad guys believe and you shouldnt MYTH 1. You cant shoot accurately with a (fill in the blank) pistol. Normally, I hear this argument about subcompacts, pistols/revolvers with long heavy triggers, or pistols that have a long double action for the first round and a single action thereafter. The fact is that all of these make firing fast and accurate groups more difficult, but it shouldnt be an excuse for poor performance. If you have a sub-compact pistol or revolver that shoots large groups, I challenge you to put it in a gun vice, shoot a few rounds with it at 10-15 feet, and see just how precise and accurate it really is. 9 times out of 10, when someone gives me a gun and tells me that its all over the place, I can put the next 5 rounds into a 1" group. Am I a good shot? Yes. But Im incredibly average as far as physical ability and natural vision go. Ive just put the time in to be able to consistently grip with 3 of my fingers, keep my thumb relaxed, and patiently focus on the front sight while I slowly press my index finger straight back. The great news about that is that you can practice 90% of what you need to be able to shoot precisely in your living room or basement, doing dry fire, without using any ammo. And once you can do it with a subcompact or a gun with a difficult trigger, you can perform with ANY pistol or revolver. MYTH 2. Its better to practice spreading your shots rather than shooting 1 hole groups. The logic here is that, as youre practicing on paper targets, you should TRY to spread out your shots so that youll do more damage to more organs and hopefully stop your attacker faster. I believe the exact opposite
that you should practice shooting 1 hole groups and progressively adding speed, motion, and/or stress. Heres why: First: Keep in mind that shooting a 1 hole group is a litmus test. The faster you can do it, the more solid your mechanical, vision, and mental skills are for shooting. The slower you have to go, or if you cant do it at all, indicates that you have some low hanging fruit for improvement. Check out http://1holechallenge.com for more info on this. Second: When you know you can shoot 1 hole groups, your EARNED (not bluster & bravado) confidence goes up. When your earned confidence is high, you stay calmer. When you stay calmer and remain more in control in an extreme stress situation, youll dump less adrenaline, have a lower heart rate, youll be able to suppress your fight or flight response, and the higher level implicit system of the brain will remain more in control
all of which leads to seeing and identifying threats faster, reacting faster, and performing closer to how you would under ideal conditions. (Confidence is 1 of many factors
having it wont guarantee success, but a lack of confidence greatly increases the chance of failure in an extreme stress situation) Third: Lets look at the TRYING to spread out your shots increases damage myth. Theoretically, I agree with this with a carbine or rifle. A pistol is not a carbine or rifle. A pistol is a relatively pathetic tool for stopping lethal threats in a timely manner and it normally takes multiple well placed shots to stop the threat from a determined attacker who is at close range. (Determined attacker=one who doesnt turn and run at the sight of a muzzle blast, regardless of what it does.) If you take exception to my comment about pistol ammo being pathetic, check your states hunting laws and see what caliber they consider to be the minimum humane caliber to use on deer. In most states, youll find that the guns that most people carry on a daily basis arent legal for hunting. So, back to spreading your groups out vs. 1 hole groups
2 things
First off, shooting a one hole group at a static paper target standing flat footed doesnt necessarily translate to shooting a 1 hole group on a dynamic attacker when youre moving. If you train to shoot 1 hole groups
or at least tight groups, youll get the 2-5" groups that youre looking for in combat when you add in speed, stress, and motion. If you insist on shooting a standard of 5-8" groups in practice (without being able to shoot 1 hole groups), stats and hundreds of police after action reports per year show that youll probably miss your target with 8-9 of 10 shots fired. Second, keep in mind that even the best defensive ammo is weak and underpowered compared to carbine and rifle ammunition and piling round after round on top of each other is a wonderful thing
if you have a specific purpose and target in mind. If youre piling round after round through the lower right quadrant of the belly, youre wasting time and ammo. But if youre viewing your attacker 3 dimensionally, as you should be, and aiming through the body for the T3-T4 vertebrae, then lets say, for arguments sake, that the first round uses up a lot of its energy punching through clothing and the sternum or other bone. The 2nd shot could go 2" away from it and spend a lot of its energy punching through barriers again, OR it could go right through the first hole and have significantly more energy to disrupt the circulatory system or possibly even get a CNS stoppage by hitting the spine. Will it really happen? Probably not. The first example is more realistic than this onethe chance of you and your attacker being in the exact same spot and orientation from 1 shot to the next is next to zero
which is all the more reason to TRY to pile your rounds on top of each other rather than adding a variable to the equation. MYTH 3. All fine motor skills will fail under extreme stress. I LOVE this argument, mainly because Ive been passionate on both sides of it. I used to be passionate that all fine motor skills failed under extreme stress
until I had enough people whod been in combat multiple times tell me I was wrong. Fine motor skills dont fail under stress, PEOPLE fail under stress and people can train and inoculate themselves to stress to the point where they can respond calmly and precisely in situations where others default to gross motor skills or freeze. This is kind of tricky and fuzzy, but suffice it to say that theres a gauntlet that you have to go through before you respond calmly in situations where others get over-amped up or freeze and you wont know that youve made it through until youve been tested and had one or more successful outcomes
be it simulated (realistically) or real. What youll find is that the more youve practiced a given fine or complex motor skill, the longer youll be able to perform it at higher pulse rates and higher adrenaline (among other brain chemical/hormone) levels. In other words, its more accurate to say that fine motor skills will fail when you have an extreme reaction to an extreme stress event. Heres an example: If youve had someone with intent point a gun at you at close range 20 times (what Id call an extreme stress event) and walked away the winner every time, youre going to be much calmer the 21st time than someone else will be if its their first time. MYTH 4. You fall down and stop fighting or die when you get shot. At the beginning of the Global War On Terror, people were getting shot with non immediate life threatening wounds, not realizing they were shot (and still fighting) and then, when they saw that they were shot, falling on the ground screaming like what theyd seen people do on TV and sometimes even dying. Its what we see on TV & movies. When you play paintball and get hit, you raise your gun and yell Im hit or Im out and stop fighting. Same with airsoft. Same with MOST wax bullet and simunition training. Its not reality. Theres a 90%+ chance that youll survive a single gunshot wound
and thats without body armor. SO KEEP FIGHTING IF YOU GET HIT and finish the fight! Poster Comment: I knew a guy in Illinois that was in the Marines during Vietnam. He was stationed at Khe Sahn. He told me that when the Communists attacked, one of their guys took a pistol and ran behind a group of rocks that hid the enemy and started to shoot them. He did it again and that is when the Commies killed him. You can do that once, but not twice. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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