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CoachLongShot

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    David Salmon

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  1. I see you're stretching out further and further. Might as well include Talon Range in Midway (Tallahassee). Right off I-10. Straight line from Jax. They shoot the first Saturday of the month, and lately have been adding the first weekend of the month. Shoot one class/division on Saturday and another on Sunday. http://www.talontraininggroup.com Coach.
  2. Ciao! And Welcome to the Forum. Coach.
  3. G34 Gen4. Really shoots well and feels good in the hand. Also with the adjustable back straps you can make it fit your specific hand/grip really well. Coach.
  4. Same here. Bayou Flat Nose at 1.135 average.
  5. Springfield all the way. I have a Springfield and the Beretta 92. Really like the 92 for the feel, grip, accuracy. Great pistol, but it just doesn't hold up to the high round count like the Springfield. I have replaced trigger bars, springs, locking blocks, ..., etc on the Beretta. After 4+ years, and 1,000's of rounds of ammo and dry fire, all I've done with the Springfield is clean it. My .02 cents, go with the XD and don't look back. Coach.
  6. Yeah, what he said. Been using 3.2grs of Titegroup behind the 147 Bayou bullets for the last year or so. Chrono says 135 or slightly higher, and they run great. I'm using them in a Beretta, XDm and Glock 34. No problems, just smiles. Coach.
  7. And the answer is.... Cleaned the gunk (probably dirt and lead) out of the groves in the shell plate holder. Called Dillon and they replaced the index block, index ring, the "little hammer", associated springs, primer plate, primer punch and sent me two alignment tools for the index/shell plate. Cleaned everything again, put it all back together and we're in business again. Not exactly sure which part solved it or a combination of all, but everything lines up again and it operates the way it should. Thank you everyone for the suggestions and thank you Dillon for sending all those parts at no cost. I offered to pay for it, but nope. They wouldn't take my money, just sent the parts to make it go. I have 1,000 pieces of 147gr Bayou Bullets waiting for me. I'm gonna see if I can get 500 rounds an hour out of this bad boy! Coach.
  8. I'm having a problem with my 650 on the down stroke (pushing handle forward) when you eat the primer. Something is jamming it up and catching. Couple of gentle bumps of the handle and it'll "clear" and seat the primer. For the life of me, I can't figure out where it's catching. I took the whole thing apart this afternoon, cleaned everything, used the platform alignment tool, tightened everything down, added a little grease/lube here and there and started reloading again. I'm still getting it caught on something every so often. It will cycle smoothly occasionally, but more times than not it getting hung up somewhere. Anybody have the same problem and fixed it? I was thinking that the primer was hitting the shell plate, but I don't believe that's the case. I use a small toothpick to "jiggle" the primer when the handle was stuck and it didn't appear to be caught on the plate. Any suggestions, ideas or help would be greatly appreciated. Coach.
  9. I have the bullet tray, strong mount, case feeder and the catch (on the right) for the completed cartridge. The dust cover will cover everything, you just can't zip it tight at the bottom. The bullet tray attachment gets in the way. Can post a photo or two if you'd like. Coach.
  10. I'd bump it up some as well. Riding right on the edge isn't that big an advatange, and if you don't make chrono it really sucks for the match. My .02 cents. Coach.
  11. Just played around with the app, works well. Thanks man! I like being able to pull information quick in one place. Let me play around with it some more and I'll give my .02 cents worth on features I'd like to see. Coach.
  12. Find a club close to you that has regular USPSA matches. Dry fire practice on the weekdays or weekends that you can't make it a match, or both. The weather and the club will eventually cooperate and you'll get to shoot a match. That's all it will take and then you're hooked. As for reload and ammo, that depends entirely on how much you want to practice/compete and how much you have to spend on ammo or accessories to reload your own. I suggest you buy ammo the first few times and make sure you like USPSA enough to make the investment in reloading equipment. Hang in there. Keep at it. Coach.
  13. Just found this one yesterday, K&M Shooting Center in Baker, Florida. http://kmshootngcenter.com They are starting up USPSA style matches. Looks like it's an hour drive for you from Panama City. Maybe you're on the West side of PC and it won't be quite so painful to drive? Good luck. Coach.
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