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lawboy

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Posts posted by lawboy

  1. I just learned something from this discussion. When I am ROing, nobody but the shooter will be allowed on the stage. Period. OD shooter can rehearse in his head OFF the stage. I will be announcing this from now on. The incident described here is just plain frightening. DOWN RANGE of the shooter during the stage run!!! :surprise: Oh. My. God!

  2. So, I went and put my SP01 Shadow on my carry permit. Not so much to carry as to made traveling to matches less headache as I can now have the gun in the car, in the trunk, loaded, unloaded whatever, no legal hassles.

    But since it is now on the permit, might as well test run it as a carry gun, right?

    So, does anyone have a holster suggestion?

  3. There are times where it appears that you are clearly looking for holes in the targets. This is a time waster. Your transitions stood out the most to me as needing work, and that could be the result of looking for holes... time wasted looking at a target you've already shot is time that could be spent finding and driving the gun to the next target spot.
    Most of your movement is very timid too, sometimes a couple of choppy steps are all that is needed, but sometimes you need to move hard. This can also be the result of a lack of confidence in your shots and/or looking for holes on the target... its tough to bust ass out of a position if you're unsure if you need to hang around to take make up shots.

    +1

  4. I see Idpa headquarter's plan worked. The wording about SO responsibility has people thinking. Good. Please realize that the wording will have no impact on liability of individual SO's or idpa. A rulebook cannot trump 200 yrs of general liability law. EVERYONE WILL BE SUED. Any lawyer worth his license will sue the SO, idpa, the shooter on deck and the waterboy. Mind you, idpa will be the target all along. Why? BECAUSE IT IS THE DEEP POCKET! So, SO, relax. Do your job. You will be sued under the new rule book just the same as you would get sued under the old rulebook and the parties with the money will sort it out in the end as always. Part of their decision-making will be how to get the testimony they want from witnesses. If I were idpa I would not leave an SO to fend for himself. That SO MAY CALL THE PLAINTFF's lawyer and say what testimony do you need? I AM YOUR GUY JUST DON'T COLLECT FROM ME.

    Yes, I am a civil trial lawyer. Yes, I have represented plaintiffs and defendants. Yes, this stuff happens daily.

  5. Very interesting and informative thread. I have shot many different games over the years and made up even more shooting activities with my friends.

    I don't considering switching my focus from one shooting interest to another "burnout." To me, that is just me following my whims.

    I have experienced a feeling of emptiness or that my shooting is meaningless and unfulfilling. Maybe that is burnout.

    But I have only experienced that feeling when I have neglected more important priorities/responsibilities in favor of shooting, and then those responsibilities/priorities move away from me or I experience the loss of those things in my life. Then I feel empty and feel like my shooting

    is meaningless and unfulfilling. I feel as if I have "paid too high a price" for the shooting and that it is not worth what I paid.

    When that happens, I stop shooting, get my shit together elsewhere in my life, and then I return to shooting feeling good about it.

    Other than that, I have been shooting without "burnout" since I was in the third grade. I cannot remember a single year in my life since then that I have not bought some kind of firearm or air arm.

  6. As the responses here show, there are many reasons to shoot L10. I started in L10 because I did not have a gun suited for Limited or Production and I wanted the extra two rounds so I could compare myself more easily to the Production shooters. I had not yet caught the SS bug. I used a Les Baer 1911 with McCormack mags and I have a very good time and was able to learn stage break down strategy by watching the production guys who had the same number of shots as I did.

    I shot L10 for a year or so, shot Area 2 in L10 in 2011 and have a great time. Later, I used the gun in SS for a year and now I am shooting production. L10 got me into the game with equipment I had and it taught me a lot. To me, that makes it worthwhile.

  7. I used load the BC 135 for my Shadow and I liked them well enough. They do tend to have some bullets with voids in the base, too many bullets for my taste. But the accuracy was good.

    I have since gotten my own mould for the same design from Magma Engineering and I cast my own. They come out at 139grs and do not have voids in the bases. :)

    I loaded the BC to 1.150 OAL over 4.0grs WST.

    I load my cast bullets to 1.145 OAL over 4.0grs WST.

  8. Has anyone noticed that their current level of physical fitness has any positive or negative impact on their mental game? I have noticed that I am mentally more confident when I am in shape, and I believe I can do things physically better than I can when I am out of shape. I think being fit enables me to take chances physically on the course of fire that I don't/won't take when I feel out of shape.

    Anyone else experience this?

    This was my post that started this thread on 2/1/2012. It has morphed into a debate about physical fitness v. shooting ability -- and that is fine. But my initial question was were people finding that their physical fitness level had a direct impact on their mental game? We are more than a year removed from my initial post and I have some insights of my own in that regard. I have maintained a pretty high level of physical fitness during the past 14 months and it definitely has had a positive impact on my mental game. I feel better, I notice concrete differences in what I am capable of doing and all of it has been mentioned by posters in this thread. I can get into and out of ackward positions more easily and more quickly, and positions that used to be uncomfortable are no longer uncomfortable. I can draw my gun more easily and with no body motion because I do not have a roll of fat in the way. I can keep my center of gravity lower because I am lighter, my legs are stronger, and thus my weight to strength ratio is greatly improved. I do not get winded. Because I do not get winded, my gun stays steadier when I am shooting. All of these things boost my mental confidence because they give me better tools in my bag to use at the match.

    Another thing I noticed,which I did not anticipate, is that being in better physical condition has greatly increased my motivation to practice. I have more energy, I feel more capable of improving and doing better, and I WANT to see just how good I can get. Where as a year ago I NEVER used to dry fire practice or live fire practice USPSA skills, today I dry fire TWICE EVERY DAY 15-30 minutes each session. I have built light weight moveable walls that I use in my backyard to make stages to dry fire. I also get in live fire practice periodically having gotten myself authorized to use pistol bays and all props at two different ranges. The result is that I am seeing the biggest gains in my game that I have ever seen. My draws, reloads, transitions, splits, movement into and out of shooting positions, even my stage planning are all much better than they were on 2/1/2012 when I started the thread. Again, all this improved my mental game even more and it just feeds on itself. So, I have answered my own question. YES, physical fitness has had a substantial positive impact on my mental game and also on my physical game!

    One of the things I got from your update was your confidence level is higher overall. Physical fitness has increased your energy levels and your ability to focus on the technical aspects of your shooting, rather than how you're feeling. It has also given you more energy to practice, which improves your confidence. It has given you the ability to move thru a course of fire, and you've demonstrated to yourself an increased ability to move better, which has improved your confidence.

    Unsung and often overlooked benefits, eh?

    Yes, definitely overlooked and, more accurately, unexpected and unanticipated and very welcome benefits!

  9. Shoot Alphas. You know how to do it, you said you were doing it before.

    Go back to what you were doing before.

    One way to determine definitively whether you are regressing or if your friends are simply closing the gap on you is to go back through all the match scores from prior matches and calculate your RAW points percentage for every match. Not your hit factor points, but your raw points shot before penalties. If that percentage is going down, then you are regressing and it is not movement, or speed, or anything other than failure to shoot accurately. If, on the other hand, your raw percentage is consistent or even going up and you are still losing to people you used to beat then yup, they done caught up to you! :goof: In that case, keep shooting alphas, just learn to do it faster.

    The stats ALWAYS hold the answers. Learn to mine them.

  10. Use dad's gun. get belt, mags, mag pouches.

    Got to match.

    At match, find someone who will sell you 40 cal. minor power factor reloads for cheap.

    download reloading manuals for free internet.

    Start saving for Dillon reloader and components.

    Get Dillon.

    Shot the absolute crap out of dad's gun! (wear that puppy out)

    Make master. :goof:

    Be happy you avoided the equipment/spend money nonsense the rest of us are caught up in.

  11. Those are funny stories. I cannot tell you all the funny equipment stuff I have seen guys dealing with at a match that could have been avoided with a standard, pre-match equipment check. I do mine the night before every local match. If I am on the road, I do it the night before I leave for the match, and every night in the hotel before the next day's shooting. Mainly it is about confidence in your equipment but every now and then you find something amiss and save yourself some headaches on the clock. :surprise:

  12. Yes, that is the one. Good to hear it works as it should. Finish difference is kind of hokey though, but not a big deal.

    I will get one when they are available again. Getting a second Shadow in CA is doable but such a pain in the ass that I think I will just go with my very well stocked parts bin with this top end added to it and call it good for traveling to matches.

  13. Has anyone noticed that their current level of physical fitness has any positive or negative impact on their mental game? I have noticed that I am mentally more confident when I am in shape, and I believe I can do things physically better than I can when I am out of shape. I think being fit enables me to take chances physically on the course of fire that I don't/won't take when I feel out of shape.

    Anyone else experience this?

    This was my post that started this thread on 2/1/2012. It has morphed into a debate about physical fitness v. shooting ability -- and that is fine. But my initial question was were people finding that their physical fitness level had a direct impact on their mental game? We are more than a year removed from my initial post and I have some insights of my own in that regard. I have maintained a pretty high level of physical fitness during the past 14 months and it definitely has had a positive impact on my mental game. I feel better, I notice concrete differences in what I am capable of doing and all of it has been mentioned by posters in this thread. I can get into and out of ackward positions more easily and more quickly, and positions that used to be uncomfortable are no longer uncomfortable. I can draw my gun more easily and with no body motion because I do not have a roll of fat in the way. I can keep my center of gravity lower because I am lighter, my legs are stronger, and thus my weight to strength ratio is greatly improved. I do not get winded. Because I do not get winded, my gun stays steadier when I am shooting. All of these things boost my mental confidence because they give me better tools in my bag to use at the match.

    Another thing I noticed,which I did not anticipate, is that being in better physical condition has greatly increased my motivation to practice. I have more energy, I feel more capable of improving and doing better, and I WANT to see just how good I can get. Where as a year ago I NEVER used to dry fire practice or live fire practice USPSA skills, today I dry fire TWICE EVERY DAY 15-30 minutes each session. I have built light weight moveable walls that I use in my backyard to make stages to dry fire. I also get in live fire practice periodically having gotten myself authorized to use pistol bays and all props at two different ranges. The result is that I am seeing the biggest gains in my game that I have ever seen. My draws, reloads, transitions, splits, movement into and out of shooting positions, even my stage planning are all much better than they were on 2/1/2012 when I started the thread. Again, all this improved my mental game even more and it just feeds on itself. So, I have answered my own question. YES, physical fitness has had a substantial positive impact on my mental game and also on my physical game!

  14. So I keep looking at these top ends and they NEVER seem to be in stock.

    Do they exist? Are they like hens teeth?

    Do they drop onto your frame or do they need fitting?

    Accuracy?

    Fitment?

    Same finish as the guns have?

    Come on folks, educate me! :goof:

    I would like to buy one to add to my "parts kit" for my SPO1 Shadow if reports are good.

    What say you?

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