HoMiE Posted March 21, 2008 Share Posted March 21, 2008 I recently change my load for my open gun from ~168 to 174 PF and noticed something similar in my shooting. I like shooting with this type of aggressive attitude, I call it attack mode. In my mind I associate "relaxed" with being conservative and it brings uncertainty to my shooting ability. When I get aggressive, I am more confident if the shot is there or not. As a result, I took less extra shots at a recent steel match and no extra shots at uspsa match. I have to push my shooting a little bit, but at the same time I am being patient to make sure the shot is there. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SA Friday Posted March 21, 2008 Share Posted March 21, 2008 If you look close, you can see varying degrees of aggressiveness and grip in this little video. (gun flip)This was a reshoot (going through the match a second time for fun). The first pass through the steel is kinda...lazy on the gun. The make-up shots got a little more focus. And, then the last two shots (on the paper)...the first there also has focus. The last shot likely does too, but there wasn't a need/desire to follow through real hard. http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-8...yners&hl=en WOW! The difference in the way the gun reacted from shot to shot was amazing. The second to last shot, the gun was just flat and smooth. You can SEE the the grip and arms are much more stable, and the gun (and shot) reacted accordingly. I don't think one could verbalize this as well at that vid showed. Good stuff. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Flexmoney Posted April 24, 2008 Share Posted April 24, 2008 I was talking to another shooter, last night, about a bit more grip with the weak hand. I thought I'd bring this back up as an example (with me as the subject in the video). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Flexmoney Posted April 24, 2008 Share Posted April 24, 2008 I think...since then...that Jake has explored a different path to the same destination. I believe that he has altered his grip and stance (physical positioning)...going to a more left elbow up? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jake Di Vita Posted April 24, 2008 Author Share Posted April 24, 2008 Yeah absolutely. I think the elbow up positioning of my weak arm and a more aggressive posture overall adds as much as 15% to how efficiently I control recoil. My experiment with this so far has yielded more consistency and less recovery time. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
HoMiE Posted August 13, 2008 Share Posted August 13, 2008 (edited) When I'm shooting I like to be 1) relaxed mentally - focused on the shooting at hand. 2) attentive visually - knowing what I want to see to make a shot and being patient enough to see it without dilly-dallying around and seeing too much 3) aggressive physically - snap my eyes where they need to go, drive the gun from target to target, and really MOVE from position to position. I missed this reading it the first time though, I thought about what Aikidale posted the other day ( http://www.brianenos.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=61709 ) Does that tie into when you say... "Everything we do has an intellectual, physical and temperamental component and while we can focus our awareness on any one or two of these, being aware of all three and how they work in unison can lead to understanding and avoidance of those 'unexplainable' errors." Edited August 13, 2008 by HoMiE Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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