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Steve Anderson

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Posts posted by Steve Anderson

  1. THe gun will always recoil more with the weak hand. That's why it's called the weak hand! :)

    Seriously, learn to isolate the trigger finger from the rest of the hand so you don't jerk the shot. Just let the recoil happen, and learn where the sight ends up.

    Practice close, and gradually move out. I used to hate weak hand, and I was inspired by someone who said,

    "if you want to be great you must practice the things you hate to do" (loosely recollected)

    Now I spend 10-15% of my practice time on one handed shooting. When it comes up in competition, I just smile while the rest of my buddies bitch and complain.

    SA

  2. I like pasting targets...It's good for fine tuning strategery, and pasting the last guy's As (or Ds) is motivating for me, and calms me down.

    I don't mind picking up brass either, except for guys who count brass on the way out. (Should be three more...) I just try to hear how many they need, then tell them, here's the rest of your brass, all X of them. :)

  3. my splits are usually .16 - .18, so I'll see next week. It's rare to be able to use the timer at the indoor range, other blasters and all...The cool thing about this was that this was the first time that live fire felt as smooth as dry fire. 'Course we all know smooth is fast...

    This was also my first time out w/ the new Burner grips. If you get the right grip at the draw you're set, if not good luck! Overall they feel very positive, MUCH less slippage.

    SA

  4. That's why I feel like an a-hole asking for quiet, and don't, although I do ask for quiet when I'm running a shooter as the RO.

    We only need to be quiet after LAMR and until the buzzer. After that it doesn't matter.

    Just druthers, no big deal.

    SA

  5. Best was .87 from draw.

    Beretta 96 E2, wilson Tactical assault holster. Minor power factor.

    First few were 1.2 ish, had to eliminate the "take too long to verify sight picture thing"

    How'm I doin'?

  6. I for one would love to see a "quiet gallery rule" enforced as the shooter starts.

    My hearing is bad (20% down at birth plus many years of Fender strat +Marshall half-stack) and I need the muffs up to reliably hear the buzzer.

    This means I get a front row seat to the "which bullet what powder whose holster how's the weather nice breeze damn it's hot breeze feels good got any sunblock look at all the wolf brass who's next look at his new gun almost lunchtime gotta piss who's got water can I borrow your towel tanked that one F'in no-shoot hope I got enough ammo for the match" conversations.

    No big deal, but I  feel like an a-hole asking for quiet.

    Anybody request silence?

    SA

    (Edited by Steve Anderson at 9:06 am on June 25, 2002)

  7. At the indoor range where I shoot, it is very common for someone to buy a gun, take it out to the range, shoot 50, then take the gun back to the retail side and say,

    "this thing shoots low and left. I need the sights adjusted."

    The guy behind the counter smiles, and says,

    "OK, but let me shoot it first and see how much to adjust it."

    He then goes out and puts 10 in one hole at 20 - 30 ft, gives the customer a lesson in sight picture and trigger control, and goes back to work.

    I wish we could blame the gun, but we normally can't.

    Which part of your finger are you using to pull the trigger? This is sometimes a culprit.

    SA

  8. I agree with duane completely, whole-heartedly and unreservedly! I can't emphasize it enough. I've go a 60 minute DF schedule that I do every night I don't shoot a match or live fire.

    This is my first full season of IPSC, and I expect to get a B card in about a month, by the way.

    Classifiers don't scare me anymore, and I look forward to one handed stages... Confidence  creates success.

    Put in an hour a day, mix it up, and you'll be amazed. Take the things you hate to do, and do them 100 times a night. Soon there won't be anything you can't do.

    BTW, my routine stresses finding the front sight over pulling the trigger in all par time drills. That helps greatly.

    SA

  9. A great phrase in the hymnal is when Brian says that if you see someone who is not as skilled as you do something extraordinary, it should give more confidence, not less.

    I would love to get to see Ernest shoot...I spoke to him a couple days ago about a few gun things, and it was very inspiring...

    SA

  10. I've been thinking about this all week, and I think I'm thinking too much, I think.

    The Book says to let these thoughts run their course, then let them go...blocking them is the same thing as trying not to think about them.

    We need to remind ourselves that if we see what we need to see, we cannot miss. Sometimes we doubt this, and try to do dumb things like point shoot an easy stage without even seeing the gun, let alone the sights.

    Ah, the journey...

    SA

  11. If mineral spirits is safe for glocks (I don't know) it might be a good choice combined with a toothbrush. It works great on my Beretta frames.

    SA

  12. I had a bar-sto put in my Beretta Billenium, and it became much more oal sensitive compared to stock, with the same kind of jams you describe.

    It was frustrating to have rounds that would hand cycle, but jam in fire.

    The g21 is a .40 right? The .40 should be less oal sensitive than the 9.

    My gun does not like berry's hollowpoints at any length, but likes fmj and rnfp just fine.

    Reminds me of a quote I read somewhere about match barrels...

    "The good news is you have a tight chamber. the bad news is you have a tight chamber."

    SA

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