2scoops Posted December 16, 2018 Share Posted December 16, 2018 Apart from the usual mag change, first shot, getting into position is there any specialized dry fire you are doing for PCC ? Link to comment
MemphisMechanic Posted December 16, 2018 Share Posted December 16, 2018 (edited) PCC is... long open. Way too many guys are doing the “sprint and stop” in four positions like they’re shooting a production gun. Move whenenver you can. Practice gliding across ports and shooting while moving fairly quick. You have a rifle. Press that advantage. You didn’t mention table starts. Get really, really good at unloaded starts from the belt and off a table. A lot of us have blown one of those pretty badly. Switching shoulders, too. Both in classifer flatfooted scenarios, and on the move to a corner with a really hard lean. I’m a lefty and locally we have lots of tight righthanded leans. I got pretty good at swapping shoulders, so it’s amusing now to watch the righties who don’t work on it. Edited December 16, 2018 by MemphisMechanic Link to comment
cvincent Posted December 16, 2018 Share Posted December 16, 2018 A nice little tip I’ve found during dry fire is if you stick something in the ejection port to hold the bolt back an inch and a half or so, the safety still works and the trigger works. I use my plugg’r chamber flag inserted longways. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Link to comment
RaylanGivens Posted December 16, 2018 Share Posted December 16, 2018 I practice the "buttstock on belt" start to make sure I get the stock on the right spot and the cheek weld where I want it... without needing to move the rifle a second time. Link to comment
rowdyb Posted December 16, 2018 Share Posted December 16, 2018 unloaded starts of all varieties presentations aka "draws" mag changes shoulder changes set ups to leans, both sides. both shoulders moving and shooting target transitions. there you go, two hours of dry fire. Link to comment
mmlook Posted December 16, 2018 Share Posted December 16, 2018 7 hours ago, MemphisMechanic said: PCC is... long Minor open. Way too many guys are doing the “sprint and stop” in four positions like they’re shooting a production gun. Move whenenver you can. Practice gliding across ports and shooting while moving fairly quick. You have a rifle. Press that advantage. You didn’t mention table starts. Get really, really good at unloaded starts from the belt and off a table. A lot of us have blown one of those pretty badly. Switching shoulders, too. Both in classifer flatfooted scenarios, and on the move to a corner with a really hard lean. I’m a lefty and locally we have lots of tight righthanded leans. I got pretty good at swapping shoulders, so it’s amusing now to watch the righties who don’t work on it. correction, PCC = Open Minor not only do you need to worry about reducing transition time(move and shoot), need to get your hits Link to comment
goldfish Posted December 16, 2018 Share Posted December 16, 2018 2 hours ago, rowdyb said: unloaded starts of all varieties presentations aka "draws" mag changes shoulder changes set ups to leans, both sides. both shoulders moving and shooting target transitions. there you go, two hours of dry fire. I do the same as noted here. For target transitions and acquisition I practice with all sighting system ( primary, secondary & laser) if you have this. Link to comment
rowdyb Posted December 16, 2018 Share Posted December 16, 2018 And this is why I like the dry fire banners or another system where you can have like 6 targets up, so you can do a lot of things standing in one spot or walking across the room/garage. Link to comment
rowdyb Posted December 16, 2018 Share Posted December 16, 2018 4 hours ago, mmlook said: need to get your hit i think i read it here on this forum, pcc is an accuracy division disguised as a speed division. Link to comment
RaylanGivens Posted December 16, 2018 Share Posted December 16, 2018 8 hours ago, rowdyb said: unloaded starts of all varieties presentations aka "draws" mag changes shoulder changes set ups to leans, both sides. both shoulders moving and shooting target transitions. there you go, two hours of dry fire. Good list, Rowdy... How do you best orchestrate the change from right shoulder to left? I have trouble figuring out where to put my hands during the transition while still holding the gun... especially if I am trying to do it on the move. Link to comment
HoMiE Posted December 16, 2018 Share Posted December 16, 2018 (edited) 23 minutes ago, RaylanGivens said: Good list, Rowdy... How do you best orchestrate the change from right shoulder to left? I have trouble figuring out where to put my hands during the transition while still holding the gun... especially if I am trying to do it on the move. There is a video on here somewhere. Basically move gun to other shoulder, grab in front of magwell with the hand you will be firing with. Now that you have 2 points of contact, move opposite hand to handguard, then move other hand from magwell to grip. Same process when you move back to other shoulder. Edited December 16, 2018 by HoMiE Added link Link to comment
rowdyb Posted December 16, 2018 Share Posted December 16, 2018 Basically just like the video homie put up. Change both hand positions for movement. Make movement. Put hands back to fire/control positions. You have to play with the timing of the change during the different points in your movement to find what will let you be back on sights/targets the quickest. Link to comment
RaylanGivens Posted December 16, 2018 Share Posted December 16, 2018 53 minutes ago, HoMiE said: There is a video on here somewhere. Basically move gun to other shoulder, grab in front of magwell with the hand you will be firing with. Now that you have 2 points of contact, move opposite hand to handguard, then move other hand from magwell to grip. Same process when you move back to other shoulder. 36 minutes ago, rowdyb said: Basically just like the video homie put up. Change both hand positions for movement. Make movement. Put hands back to fire/control positions. You have to play with the timing of the change during the different points in your movement to find what will let you be back on sights/targets the quickest. Thanks, guys... Grabbing the magwell seems to be the point I was missing... Keeps better control of the rifle... I kept trying to grab forward on the handguard and then fumbling with my hands... Video helps... Link to comment
longbeard Posted December 16, 2018 Share Posted December 16, 2018 A note on the shoulder switching... Dont forget to practice switching after doing a reload. Pretty common classifier situationSent from my SM-N950U using Tapatalk Link to comment
rowdyb Posted December 16, 2018 Share Posted December 16, 2018 Yep. Why my dry fire list above takes 2 hours. All the possible variations that you got to do. Link to comment
MemphisMechanic Posted December 16, 2018 Share Posted December 16, 2018 (edited) How I switch shoulders from strong to weak: 1. Offhand moves back to front of magwell. 2. Strong hand moves from pistol grip to out on handguard. 3. Weak hand goes to fire control. Where the stock is moved to the opposite shoulder varies depending on how you’re moving uprange/downrange/sideways or if you’re static. Many people move the strong hand forward to the magwell first. I find that I can be more agressive snapping the offhand backward and gripping the magwell on the trip backward, then accomplish the rest on the move. It’s personal preference. Edited December 16, 2018 by MemphisMechanic Link to comment
jkrispies Posted December 16, 2018 Share Posted December 16, 2018 (edited) 2 hours ago, HoMiE said: There is a video on here somewhere. Basically move gun to other shoulder, grab in front of magwell with the hand you will be firing with. Now that you have 2 points of contact, move opposite hand to handguard, then move other hand from magwell to grip. Same process when you move back to other shoulder. Nice video, Homie! I'm going to add that to my training routine. 6 hours ago, rowdyb said: i think i read it here on this forum, pcc is an accuracy division disguised as a speed division. That's how Steel Challenge was once explained to me... and it was by the guy who invented it. I think that's good advice regardless of the game and gun so I continue to incorporate fundamentals-type training into my routine as well as USPSA specific skills. Edited December 16, 2018 by jkrispies Link to comment
stick Posted December 17, 2018 Share Posted December 17, 2018 19 hours ago, rowdyb said: And this is why I like the dry fire banners or another system where you can have like 6 targets up, so you can do a lot of things standing in one spot or walking across the room/garage. Pretty much what I use. Link to comment
RaylanGivens Posted December 17, 2018 Share Posted December 17, 2018 I print out targets from target images that I found years ago... Did a search on the file names and found them posted here by ChuckS... Here's a link to ChuckS' post with the file links... I print them out on an 8.5x11" page to make them smaller and appear to be distant. Link to comment
blaese490 Posted December 17, 2018 Share Posted December 17, 2018 Don't look past the reloads. Although 40 rounds is enough, the classifiers are where the guys who don't practice reloads get left behind! Link to comment
motherFNbrandon Posted December 17, 2018 Share Posted December 17, 2018 for stages where a string might be freestyle, reload, then weakhand, can the freestyle portion be done on the weak side, so that no shoulder change would be necessary? Link to comment
phoenixsomd Posted December 17, 2018 Share Posted December 17, 2018 Ben Stoeger's Skills and Drill's is a solid resource for ideas on dry and live-fire drills. You can buy or make reduced/scale sized targets to fit the space you have available. Link to comment
DKorn Posted December 17, 2018 Share Posted December 17, 2018 3 hours ago, motherFNbrandon said: for stages where a string might be freestyle, reload, then weakhand, can the freestyle portion be done on the weak side, so that no shoulder change would be necessary? I believe so. “Freestyle” essentially means that you can shoot however you want as long as it’s within the other rules. The rulebook never actually defines “freestyle” shooting in the same way it does strong hand and weak hand only. Link to comment
2Alphamikenoshoot Posted December 25, 2018 Share Posted December 25, 2018 PCC is... long open. Way too many guys are doing the “sprint and stop” in four positions like they’re shooting a production gun. Move whenenver you can. Practice gliding across ports and shooting while moving fairly quick. You have a rifle. Press that advantage. [emoji3] You didn’t mention table starts. Get really, really good at unloaded starts from the belt and off a table. A lot of us have blown one of those pretty badly. Switching shoulders, too. Both in classifer flatfooted scenarios, and on the move to a corner with a really hard lean. I’m a lefty and locally we have lots of tight righthanded leans. I got pretty good at swapping shoulders, so it’s amusing now to watch the righties who don’t work on it. Yes! What this guy said. I do ben stoegers stuff out of his dry fire and dry fireReloaded book. And I apply that to PCC. So if it’s a classifier type drill where you shoot freestyle then change hands and go weak hand I apply that and do it. But a lot of hard left leans it’s much faster to switch shoulders coming into position, shooting that array all lefty and switching again when you can soak it up in movement. I see righties sit there trying to act like gymnasts trying to lean out all pretzeled up takin 3-5 seconds to shoot an array cause they simply refuse to shoot lefty PCC. Also make sure you’re engaging the safety and then switching shoulders. Ahem. Don’t ask me how I learned this the hard way [emoji23] Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Link to comment
2Alphamikenoshoot Posted December 25, 2018 Share Posted December 25, 2018 Good list, Rowdy... How do you best orchestrate the change from right shoulder to left? I have trouble figuring out where to put my hands during the transition while still holding the gun... especially if I am trying to do it on the move. Ok. So. Right shouldered freestyle with sight picture. 1) engage safety2) left hand goes to mag well (Charlie Sheen navy seal)3) switch the whole gun over to 4) right hand grabs hand guard as far forward as possible 5) Left hand grabs pistol grip6) re engage safety7) start squirting bullets all over the place. Oh and something I forgot to mention. When you grab the mag well change your foot stance. So instead of left foot forward you want to go right foot forward. I try to maintain a pretty neutral stance when shooting carbines or whatever butttt you wanna make this a habit so you’re more squared up and able to transition a bit better through an array while maintain a better NPA Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Link to comment
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