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ArrDave

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Posts posted by ArrDave

  1. Using a sport coat may not be legal per IDPA rules. Because of the cut of most sport coats, when doing the "scarecrow" stance, because of the cut and normal shoulder, it opens enough that one can see the gun from the front. The only option is to button the top button. With this, it becomes legal.....at least when I check 8 of my sport coats. (did this because I want to shoot a sanctioned match in the future and want to be the best dressed revolver shooter there <G>)

    I wear a sport coat to work each day, and some days for indoor matches I just ran it as a concealment garment in the cold weather months. I use athletic/tailored fit and I can pass scarecrow with those, but (!) we don't check gear for a weekly indoor match as long as your satisfying the intent of the rules and not gaining competitive advantage we let it slide.

  2. I honestly couldn't find 1911 specific videos. Ron Avery has a lot of videos on line and he's a beast with a 1911, obviously Rob Leatham, Larry Vickers, Nils Jonasson, etc. I would just look at the results from the most recent single stack nationals and start Youtubing down the list to see videos. For me it helped shooting with guys who had been on the platform a long time. Slide lock reloads still aren't as fast for me on single stacks as they were with Glocks due to the releasing the slide mechanism. If you don't run an extended slide stop, you'll be dropping the slide with the thumb of your support hand at slide lock.

    On the positive side, the grip of a 1911 I feel like I can get a better grip on and the sights track more consistently on a 1911 than with a Glock, it's a lot harder to throw shots because of bad trigger press (although still very possible!), and I find there to be a joy running a 1911 that wasn't there with a Glock. Feels like running an heirloom timepiece. That said I fell in sand tossing a football with a buddy and didn't feel great about my 1911's chances of emptying the mag after inspecting it. I probably will go back to carrying my Glocks.

  3. I can't give you all the info you seek, but having made the switch from Glock to 1911 at the end of the last year, be prepared you're likely going to overpull the trigger a lot in the first month/ two and throw shots low. Plan on a lot of dryfire and slowfire practice shooting groups until you "get" the trigger. You'll need to drill in your new "index" with a different grip angle (point with your pointer when bringing the gun up, not with your thumb like on a Glock).

    The skill set is largely the same, it's just practicing adapting it to the new platform. i wish there were shortcuts I could offer, but I didn't find any. Took me about 2 months of dedicated practice/living the platform until i was up to speed.

    I asked similar questions adopting the platform, and to summarize it "Get used to it".

  4. Bowenbuilt, I've been shooting blue bullets since reading about your adventures with them since about the end of last year... do you find these Acme bullets to be that much better? The blues have been great, no fouling, no smoke, no smell, reasonable pricing.

  5. I like the hyena a lot too. They standout a little more against the black. Bad thing is I probably have more invested in this gun than an sti rangemaster.

    yeah, but the gun is built to your specs. If you don't like the stock magwell or grips on a rangemaster, you'd have to add those too.

  6. Doing my homework, it appears 5.5-5.6 grains loaded out to 1.25-6 behind a coated LRN will reliably net a 170 PF... Starting to be that time again, not in love with my current powder and CFE seems to come up for sale locally more reliably... Anyone using it?

    Also, 700x has come up here locally... in my Lyman book that's the "most accurate" powder, I seem to recall, but I hear it meters poorly (or meters well... once it's "settled in" to the hopper)

    Thoughts?

  7. There's nothing the 4.25" will get you that the 5" won't do better, other than coming out of the holster slightly faster. For classifiers, that may benefit you slightly, but not in match shooting. Since pretty much every M&P gets an apex anyway, if you can find a 9L and drop in new sights/trigger you shoudl be good to go.

  8. I always tell the new guys to spend less than $50 on a concealment garment. It's the least important piece of kit to run IDPA and some folks drop $120+ on them. I can't tell a difference between the 5.11 range/tactical vests, fishing vests (legit fishing vests), and the competitive concealment/armadillo concealment ones. The only thing the high dollar ones REALLY have going for them is the mesh panel on the back for those mid summer matches.

    There is no way a fly fishing vest would cover a gun and mags worn at the waist. They are short for a reason.

    Yet and still my concealment garment is indeed a fishing vest, so the longer variety do exist. I'm 6'5 so I have to wear my belt a touch higher than normal to pass the scarecrow, but it's the same with the 5.11 et all as well.

  9. it's like 24 oz empty. Tha's what i was thinking , Thought it was a little heavier, but GP USA website says 24. hopefully

    I do have after market base pads, but they do fit in the box ( Shockbottle Base pads).

    This is how it usually works.. "oh my god, he's faster than most of the people here" "he must have a cheater gun or be cheating"

    It is my sincere hope that you've never encountered that. The current world champ in IDPA shoots a Glock 34, I'm not 100% but I'm pretty sure Nils won ESP at indoor nats with a 1911/2011. There are no short cuts.

  10. I always tell the new guys to spend less than $50 on a concealment garment. It's the least important piece of kit to run IDPA and some folks drop $120+ on them. I can't tell a difference between the 5.11 range/tactical vests, fishing vests (legit fishing vests), and the competitive concealment/armadillo concealment ones. The only thing the high dollar ones REALLY have going for them is the mesh panel on the back for those mid summer matches.

  11. Other than the equipment rules (mag pouches, belts etc) there are two major differences . In Production you can go with a tungsten guide rod. In IDPA for SSP, tungsten guide rods are prohibited( Stainless steel ones are OK for SSP). In IDPA a replacement magazine base pad can't be more than 1oz heavier than stock. USPSA doesn't explicitly limit the weight of the base pad but the total weight limit of the gun + empty magazine is 2 oz over the production list published weight.

    I'm curious. Do you have a steel or tungsten guide rod in a Glock? Have you noticed any reduction in recoil or muzzle rise?

    Near as I can tell, it's like arguing about GI vs. FLGR on 1911s. Some folks swear up and down there is a difference and the gun feels like it tracks smoother, others say "I just put $50 in my gun for what?". I couldn't tell the difference, or if the difference was there it was not enough for me to be able to exploit it. It's my personal theory they're trying to sell those predominantly to the guy who has memorized all the words to the Cory & Erika youtube vids and talks about being able to rack their slides off their belts or grip their gun even if their hands are covered in blood.

  12. The fastest way is to drop mag with strong hand thumb after breaking grip slightly. Weak hand should have next mag ready as depleted mag falls free. Weak hand inserts to lock, and strong thumb closes to rebuild grip while raking slide release on the way. Slide should be traveling back into battery as pistol is brought back into sight alignment/on target and grip should be rebuilt and ready to break next shot as soon as sights find next target.

    Making this process happen is simple. Making it smooth is fast.

    Looked at releasing slide with strong hand vs weak hand. It was slower for me, but I'm not running extended slide release.

  13. More than familiar with the power stroke or whatever, but my goal is to win the game! Plus Frank Proctor teaches slide release in combat shooting as well, just FYI

    Sent from an iDevice. Please forgive any grammatical or spelling errors. If the post doesn't make sense or is not amusing then it is technology's fault and most certainly not operator error.

  14. How long does it take a match bump to show up?

    I won my class at a recent tier 3 match, beating 19 that are in my class or higher. Scores have been official for over a week now. Website still has my previous class.

    The match director does match bumps "by hand" on the IDPA website. Usually takes some time after the results are official. My bump from the Indoor Nats took about 10 days.

    Coming up on a month

    Sent from an iDevice. Please forgive any grammatical or spelling errors. If the post doesn't make sense or is not amusing then it is technology's fault and most certainly not operator error.

    I'd send an email to the match director.

    I checked today, it's gone through finally. I sent two emails to IDPA, never heard back from them. The match director got his scores uploaded pretty quick, they finalized them in 5 days or so.

  15. I searched but could not find any info. Has anyone tried Brownells 1911 magazines? I am a newbie to single stack and looking to get some mags. I can get the Brownells 8-round mags for $20 each. I have been impressed with their aluminum AR mags and am wondering if their 1911 were of similar quality. I know I can get CM power mags for $25 each, but why not save $50 since I will be buying 10 or so mags.

    Have you considered Check Mate Hybrid Competitions? they're like $21 apiece shipped from 44mag.com and they work great. I'm coming up on 2k rounds through them and no malfunctions at all. Once the spring is broken in seating the mags on a loaded chamber is no big deal.

  16. Id love to see the same thing too. We have a yearly single stack challenge and its next month. My buddy bought a 1911 and we are going to share it and shoot the match. I have big hands but they are so thick that I have never held a gun I could drop the mag without changing grip (minus my HK, use the trigger finger) and this 1911 is sooooo far away. I have to turn the gun sideways basically to hit the release.

    You will break your grip to drop the mag, for sure. you definitely release with the support hand thumb.

    Practicing it again today I think my issue is where to hold the gun to reliably seat it. With the single stack mags, it's a lot less forgiving of angle. And if you guys don't have a mag guide on your buddy's 1911, I would recommend one.

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