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Brian Enos's Forums... Maku mozo!

perttime

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Posts posted by perttime

  1. Try to remember where the targets are and pick one way, whether it is ideal or not.

    One of the more interesting stages that I have been trough was a Finnish IPSC-style contest for military reservists. They had managed to set up a stage along a woodland trail so that you couldn't see any targets from the starting point. No walkthrough allowed: follow the trail and shoot all the targets you can find... The kind of targets to look for was specified. I recall there were USPSA style paper targets and a few poppers.

  2. You are talking "tactical" shooting and not contest?

    If you are that close, chances are the assailant has a hand on your pistol too.

    I'm not sure if gunsmiths still do it, but I recall some tactical 1911 mods, way back, with a shield in front of the slide to prevent going out of battery. My brain is showing me a close up photo where there are small sharp cones on the shield to prevent slipping...

  3. But are they actually accurate?

    I like the price and the features - but in the one review that I've read, they tried a good number of different factory loads in 308 and there was only one that would stay sub-MOA. I've shot a few old-fashioned rifles that would do sub-MOA with just about any decent ammo (a couple of target/sniper style rifles and a pretty plain Tikka deer rifle).

  4. Smooth is fast.

    I have truly grown to hate this cliche, even more so when preceded by "slow is smooth".

    ..

    OK, I'll give you an other one: "Take your time quickly."

    There may be people who can instinctively get a pistol on target quickly ,the first time they get one in their hands. Many seem to benefit from starting - let's call it - "deliberate", so that they can actively eliminate wasted movement.

  5. My pins didn't come with tabs. Is this something you made yourself? Got pix?

    Just small molded pieces of blue plastic. There's a hole for the locator button to go through, in the thin part - and a little something in the other end, so that you can grip it and lift the pin out easily.

    On the Dillon site, 1050 conversions seem to have them in the small parts bag.

    https://www.dillonprecision.com/rl1050-super1050-misc-conversion-parts_8_51_25632.html

    ... but using those tabs leaves the case slight room to move - too much at the priming station of my OLD SDB. Maybe that is why you didn't get them. The SDB video doesn't show them either: https://www.dillonprecision.com/dillon-square-deal-b_8_1_25237.html

  6. You trained your finger to be crooked and down for reloads. Now you need to train it to be straight and up. It can be good to find some "key" on the frame or slide. Perhaps the seam between frame and slide, that you want to touch any time that you are not firing the pistol.

    Repeat a few thousand times in dry firing...

  7. Mine has never failed to deprime but I suppose it is possible.

    Glad you haven't had the problem yet, but it is much more than possible -

    happens quite a bit. Have to keep an eye out for it. :surprise:

    I check my primers when I reload my mags - make sure the primer is there,

    not too tall, and definitely not already dimpled (fired). :cheers:

    Maybe I'm lucky. I haven't kept records and don't load and shoot quite as much as some do. But a pretty good number of rounds have come out of my SDB.

    The primer problems that I've encountered have been failures to feed new primers when switching to another caliber. There was a time when I was making do with one primer slide for 3 calibers, and needed to adjust everything when switching. Also, the case needs to be pretty accurately in place at the priming station. At some stage, I decided that it is better to leave the tab off the pin that holds the case in the shell plate.

  8. What is this safety card you speak of?

    I'm not sure how wide spread that kind of thing is in IPSC - but here the IPSC Region requires that participants go through lessons on the rules, focusing on safety, and some closely monitored practice. Then you do an exam on the rules and some short stages as a practical exam to prove that you can shoot without being DQd. That puts you in a database for "safe shooters".

  9. I don't like the notion of muscle memory, your muscles don't have any. You build actual memory and increase your input processing, that is it.

    Like so much of our game there is a lot of visual input processing going on here. Sure, your NPA helps a LOT here and after enough drifire you can probably draw to a A blindfolded at a know distance, but almost everything we do is vision driven. I don't like to wait for the sights to appear I like to LOOK for them as the gun comes up on the target. I look for them hard nowadays.

    Of course the muscles don't remember anything. But your mind can remember the position and feel of your limbs when the sights are aligned.

    Dry firing should help. See where your sights tend to appear when you draw. If there's some consistency there, move your feet to get them aligned on the target and see what happens when you draw again. If you can get a sight picture while keeping your eyes closed during the draw, move your feet to get that alignment on target. Then your eyes have less work to refine the alignment.

  10. It is a kind of tradition. CZ has got barrel lengths wrong for years. I think it is close enough :).

    Maybe they convert from mm to inch to mm to inch to mm?

    Maybe they just make a new web page based on an old one - and forget to update some of the items.

    (... been there, done that)

  11. I'm using the translucent tape method on the left lens. It seems to block out just enough "ghosting" to be clear.

    ...

    I read on here somewhere that at one time Brian Enos used the same method for years and was very successful.

    At least he mentions it in the book.

    If it works, good. I have a faint memory that I used to have problems focusing on sights with both eyes open. Somehow, it has become the natural thing. Try it without the tape some time. I believe the eyes and brain are likely to learn it.

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