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Brian Enos's Forums... Maku mozo!

Humm


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Good way to look at it, but it may help you visually to use the optical properties of the no-shoot and hardcover. For instance, the human eye is very effective at automatically determining the center of a given object, and if the arrangement of a shoot/no-shoot target is such that the target-area is at the center, you can use the entire array to help aim at that center.

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Dont think to yourself "Don't hit the NS". Instead say "Im going to hit whats left of the Azone there".

Another humm. I always focused on shooting the center of what was there(available shoot area, maybe closer to the A-zone) for speed but the center of the available A-zone area? Humm.

Thanks!

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Ommmmmm it is not a Gino State Match it is a normal match...it is not a Gino State Match oMMMMMMMMM

Now, let us concentrate on...breeeeeeeeeeeeathinnnnnnnggggggggg.....

Ooooooommmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm

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Ommmmmm it is not a Gino State Match it is a normal match...it is not a Gino State Match oMMMMMMMMM

Now, let us concentrate on...breeeeeeeeeeeeathinnnnnnnggggggggg.....

Ooooooommmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm

You forgot, I helped to set this frackin mara-thong up! :angry2:

Don't mess with the religious experience I'm having right now! :ph34r:

Edited by Silver_Surfer
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In my dry practice, I rarely have a target that does not have a no shoot on it. I know some people practice with targets without stuff on them, then when they get to a match they try and figure out where they are going to place the sights.

Now for me, I am so used to picking my spot that it comes automatically when there is a no shoot or hard cover.

The same is pretty much true for live fire practice. Lots of no shoots at various distances (18-30yrds). Because of this I rarely look at my draw time. I try and pay attention to my transitions. I get a much more realistic picture of my skill level this way.

As a side note: I was horseing around with folks after a practice session. We were doing draws on a 7 yard target. My time was 1.0 second out of a Safariland 560 Concealment type holster, a Master out of a 012 race holster hit 1.0 then dropped down to .93. So I figure my draws are not blazing but adequate, since I rarely practice draws at that distance.

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In my dry practice, I rarely have a target that does not have a no shoot on it. I know some people practice with targets without stuff on them, then when they get to a match they try and figure out where they are going to place the sights.

Now for me, I am so used to picking my spot that it comes automatically when there is a no shoot or hard cover.

The same is pretty much true for live fire practice. Lots of no shoots at various distances (18-30yrds). Because of this I rarely look at my draw time. I try and pay attention to my transitions. I get a much more realistic picture of my skill level this way.

Practicing more difficult target/shot scenarios than you will typically find in a match is a good thing.

be

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