hoodhazard Posted February 3, 2006 Share Posted February 3, 2006 Thanks Ryan,I have needed a routine to practice,for I have never practiced drills and haven't developed a lot of skills I need and my progress has stagnated.I will post after several months of these drills. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Billy Smith Posted February 7, 2006 Share Posted February 7, 2006 I personally think a great training drill is starting off with barricade hands on "X". Upon start signal draw and shoot an entire mag at one target 10 / 15 / or 25 yds. Alternate one shot per side until complete. This will do a couple of things; 1.Learn the draw from behind a barracade,2.If the shooter is in a small box the constant re-presentation will help with picking up the front sight and breaking the shot. 3. If the box is large, the shooter can learn to stay off of the barracade and use there lower body to gain position on the target. Without having to re-present the weapon because they never brought the gun back to there body, the shooter WILL gain smoother transitions around an obstical. Just a thought... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
slowsure Posted February 9, 2006 Share Posted February 9, 2006 If your club shoots IDPA then why not run a single string from the classifier. Not the whole thing just one part. New shooters will have to shoot the classifier sometime anyhoo. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Castle Posted February 26, 2006 Share Posted February 26, 2006 Anything that promotes precision of movement and accuracy. Distances or target size should force excellent aiming and trigger control. Cover the basic movements: draws, reloads, target transitions and movement. New shooters will try to sound like everybody else before they try to shoot like everybody else. Accuracy and precision have been forgotten. We need to bring this back into our sport. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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