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Andreas

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Posts posted by Andreas

  1. See you shoot at South River a lot. Do you ever shoot at East Alabama Gun Club? Just shot with a guy, Mike Russo, on Sunday who shoots at South River pretty often.

    Haven't shot at EAGC before but that will change with the Sectional in March. I do recognize Mike's name from matches at SRGC—he shoots Open if I'm not mistaken.

  2. The factory pin is staked into place. You take it out with a punch, and replacing it requires staking.

    The CGW pin is slightly notched in the center. The trigger spring holds it into place by catching on the edges. No staking required.

  3. I had occasional feeding problems until I installed extra-power springs in all my CZ-75 magazines. The stock springs had trouble keeping the rounds firmly planted against the feed lips.

  4. The instructors were reviwing the draw with the class and were demonstrating a draw in which the gun is drawn from the holster, and met with the support hand somewhere around the center line of the body (All good so far).

    Not really. I cut a tenth or so off my draw by moving my support hand across my centerline to catch the pistol just after the muzzle goes horizontal. Establishing my grip earlier makes for breaking the first shot faster.

    If you can see your sights during your draw, then you're not moving the pistol fast enough. With enough dry fire, you can look at a spot on the wall, draw, and see your sights more or less lined up on that spot. Ditching the press-out is one of the things that got me to A class.

    Check out some videos of Grauffel, Stoeger, et al. at LiveShots and watch what they're doing.

  5. it all depends on how 'positive' you like the reset. it obviously will reset a little slower and with less force than with a stronger spring. if you are one who ride the reset it could cause a problem. if however you get your finger right off the trigger between shots there is no downside really.

    This sounds about right. I'd gotten away from riding the reset a couple months ago and come off the trigger between shots these days. That's probably why the lighter TRS didn't cause trouble at last month's match.

  6. I installed a CGW reduced-power trigger-return spring in my SP01 Shadow when the factory one broke. I like that it noticeably reduced the pull weight, and it doesn't appear to have hurt my splits. Is there a downside that I haven't come across? The one concern would be function if the pistol got especially dirty.

  7. Suggestions would include a competition or tactical rear sight that fits the standard dovetail. You can have the slide cut for different sights and stay in USPSA Production, but that will kick you out of SSP or IPSC Production.

    All my CZs work fine with 13# hammer springs. The lighter slide of the models with Hi-Power cuts means you need a heavier recoil spring than the 11# folks run in Shadows. Try a 13# and see how it works with your ammo.

    Beveling the mag well or re-countering the slide are both no-go for Production. The only metal removal you can do is if it's needed for different sights.

  8. An 11# should do the trick on models with a full-thickness slide (e.g., SP01). The slides with lightening cuts like the 75B Stainless need a heavier spring. I run a 13# or 14# in mine.

  9. I recently received my SP-01 Shadow Custom Black (Item Number: 91029) from CZCustom. I'm used to shooting pistols without safeties (SIG P series, Ruger SP-101, etc). I am wondering about the function of the safety.

    USPSA Production rules call for a hammer-down start, so I disregard it.

    Seriously, think of it as a mediocre thumb rest and drive on.

  10. Instructor: Ben Stoeger is a USPSA Production Grand Master, having numerous Section, Area, and National Championship wins. Ben finished the 2011, 2012, and 2013 seasons as the USPSA Production National Champion.

    Location: South River Gun Club

    Date: 8–9 March 2014

    Time: 0900–1700 both days

    Course topics:

    USPSA techniques (this will consist mostly of specialized movement techniques)

    Moving targets

    Stage breakdown/analysis

    Practice tips and techniques

    High-speed accuracy

    Preparation for major matches

    + anything people request to be added

    Course description:

    The class consists of shooting a variety of drills and USPSA stages with Ben teaching techniques and then assessing each student's performance and providing personalized feedback and guidance. Students will have an opportunity to re-shoot the stages and drills with this feedback in mind. The class is geared toward USPSA shooting, but the vast majority of the concepts apply equally well to IDPA. The goal is for each student to leave the course understanding what they need to do to develop their shooting.

    Check feedback on recent classes and a discussion on the November class.

    Ammo: Expect to shoot 500 rounds per day. Bring extra.

    Class Size: Maximum of 12 students, and I need at least 8 to hold the class.

    Payment: $400 ($350 tuition + $50 range/materials), payable by check or money order. Full balance must be paid to hold your spot. No refunds after 8 February unless there's someone to take your spot.

    Contact me for payment details (Andreas Yankopolus, andreas@yank.to).

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