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Gun saves another day
wrote in message ... On Wed, 22 Jul 2009 22:17:24 -0400, H the K wrote: You can also have the problem with a 9mm or .38 that even a decently placed shot won't stop a motivated perpetrator before he can get to you. There are lots of places on the body, even in the head with no organs that a hole in will cause instant death. It is possible to end up dead next to your dying attacker. I practice at a range used by cops, lots of cops, and some military personnel, too. Once in a while, not often, I see a cop who knows how to shoot, by which I mean he/she can put most of the rounds in a mag in the "10" zone on a target at typical "combat" distances. Most of the cops I've seen at the range are just terrible shots, which I take as meaning they don't practice often or they don't care. I'm aware of the vagaries of any situation. Other than the "fun" factor, that's why I practice quite a bit at the range and other places where I can shoot. Here's a fellow firing an older P226, DA-SA. My X-5 is a P-226, but SA only. http://politics.theatlantic.com/mt-42/mt-tb.cgi/12231 The last minute shows how quickly the pistol cycles. Lots of shots. My mags hold 19 rounds, plus one in the pipe. Oh...I've taken Sig's Close Quarter Operator's Course. ... and nobody told you not to put your finger in the trigger guard before you are going to shoot? That has been in self defense and police tactical shooting courses for decades. We were even starting to incorporate that into skeet shooting etiquette when I was in Md. Call the bird, point the gun, acquire the target, then put your finger in the hole and shoot, It is just a habit you should get into. This is best demonstrated in one of the most famous cop pictures in the world. http://gfretwell.com/ftp/Gonzoles.jpg 30 or so years ago I duck humted with the weapons officer of one of the bay area police forces. He stated, the average police shootout is at 6', 9 shots are fired and no one is hit. Hard to aim when ducking for cover. |
Gun saves another day
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Gun saves another day
On Wed, 22 Jul 2009 22:07:39 -0700, Calif Bill wrote:
30 or so years ago I duck humted with the weapons officer of one of the bay area police forces. He stated, the average police shootout is at 6', 9 shots are fired and no one is hit. Hard to aim when ducking for cover. NYPD did an analysis of police combat. Your weapons officer friend isn't too far off the mark. I've also heard, can't swear to it's veracity, but the average cop never pulls his gun in the line of duty. http://www.virginiacops.org/Articles...ing/Combat.htm |
Gun saves another day
On 7/23/09 7:15 AM, thunder wrote:
On Wed, 22 Jul 2009 22:07:39 -0700, Calif Bill wrote: 30 or so years ago I duck humted with the weapons officer of one of the bay area police forces. He stated, the average police shootout is at 6', 9 shots are fired and no one is hit. Hard to aim when ducking for cover. NYPD did an analysis of police combat. Your weapons officer friend isn't too far off the mark. I've also heard, can't swear to it's veracity, but the average cop never pulls his gun in the line of duty. http://www.virginiacops.org/Articles...ing/Combat.htm My guess is that the police don't train sufficiently for close-in shooting. I always "warm-up" at the range by first shooting at a target 7 to 10 feet away, then about 20 feet away, and then I run the target out to 75 feet. You also need to learn a good pistol pointing technique. Of course, if you are a warn-out old ninja wannabe, trained by the marines, you don't need to bring a pistol to a gunfight...just throw your shuriken. -- A wise Latina makes better decisions than a dumb elephant. |
Gun saves another day
On Thu, 23 Jul 2009 07:37:45 -0400, H the K wrote:
http://www.virginiacops.org/Articles...ing/Combat.htm My guess is that the police don't train sufficiently for close-in shooting. I always "warm-up" at the range by first shooting at a target 7 to 10 feet away, then about 20 feet away, and then I run the target out to 75 feet. You also need to learn a good pistol pointing technique. You might want to read down in the article where it states there is a clear disconnect between range marksmanship, and combat hitsmanship. I think Calif Bill is correct when he states "Hard to aim when ducking for cover." As for training, NYPD is second to none. |
Gun saves another day
wrote:
On Wed, 22 Jul 2009 22:17:24 -0400, H the K wrote: You can also have the problem with a 9mm or .38 that even a decently placed shot won't stop a motivated perpetrator before he can get to you. There are lots of places on the body, even in the head with no organs that a hole in will cause instant death. It is possible to end up dead next to your dying attacker. I practice at a range used by cops, lots of cops, and some military personnel, too. Once in a while, not often, I see a cop who knows how to shoot, by which I mean he/she can put most of the rounds in a mag in the "10" zone on a target at typical "combat" distances. Most of the cops I've seen at the range are just terrible shots, which I take as meaning they don't practice often or they don't care. I'm aware of the vagaries of any situation. Other than the "fun" factor, that's why I practice quite a bit at the range and other places where I can shoot. Here's a fellow firing an older P226, DA-SA. My X-5 is a P-226, but SA only. http://politics.theatlantic.com/mt-42/mt-tb.cgi/12231 The last minute shows how quickly the pistol cycles. Lots of shots. My mags hold 19 rounds, plus one in the pipe. Oh...I've taken Sig's Close Quarter Operator's Course. ... and nobody told you not to put your finger in the trigger guard before you are going to shoot? That has been in self defense and police tactical shooting courses for decades. We were even starting to incorporate that into skeet shooting etiquette when I was in Md. Call the bird, point the gun, acquire the target, then put your finger in the hole and shoot, It is just a habit you should get into. This is best demonstrated in one of the most famous cop pictures in the world. http://gfretwell.com/ftp/Gonzoles.jpg But you have to remember, because if all of Harry's lies, insults, and general nastiness, he's a scared piece of crap that answers his door with a loaded gun. |
Gun saves another day
On 7/23/09 7:53 AM, thunder wrote:
On Thu, 23 Jul 2009 07:37:45 -0400, H the K wrote: http://www.virginiacops.org/Articles...ing/Combat.htm My guess is that the police don't train sufficiently for close-in shooting. I always "warm-up" at the range by first shooting at a target 7 to 10 feet away, then about 20 feet away, and then I run the target out to 75 feet. You also need to learn a good pistol pointing technique. You might want to read down in the article where it states there is a clear disconnect between range marksmanship, and combat hitsmanship. I think Calif Bill is correct when he states "Hard to aim when ducking for cover." As for training, NYPD is second to none. I'm aware of the disconnect. The only way to be proficient with firearm is to practice, practice, practice. Now, whether you could shoot someone in combat, that's a separate question. There's no way to train for that, not really. You can make your gun handling, positioning, aiming, shooting a reflex, as it were, but shooting someone, especially the first time, is a leap of another magnitude, or at least it is for a non-automaton. I'm just not that impressed with tales of cop gunmanship. Certainly there are cops who excel at handling firearms, but I don't think that applies to your typical cop. I've seen too many of them shoot badly at the ranges, and very few that shoot well. I don't think many of them practice enough. -- A wise Latina makes better decisions than a dumb elephant. |
Gun saves another day
On Wed, 22 Jul 2009 21:25:11 -0400, H the K
wrote: On 7/22/09 9:11 PM, Gene wrote: On Wed, 22 Jul 2009 17:08:54 -0700, wrote: p Oh for ****'s sake Gene, you're assuming whomever is weidling the knife is an expert. Flawed logic. The guy in this case obviously meant to kill both women but left one alive. Sound like a knife expert to you? Neither of the women were armed from what I understand. Any dweeb with two hands and an arse can put a bullet through someone's skull at close range. What's the chance of survival? And I suppose merely being in possession of a gun somehow imbues the wielder with magical powers of perfect aim...... At 10 feet with a target the size of an adult human and some considerable experience handling and shooting firearms? You don't need perfect aim, just "decent" aim. BBBAAAWWWAAAHHHHHAAAAAAA!!!!! 1 - I guarentee you don't have considerable experience with guns in close quarter combat conditions. You have considerable experience shooting targets although I doubt that also. 2 - I guarentee you, assuming that you could even get a shot off, that it would be high and to the right passing harmlessly by your assailant. 3 - I guarentee you, you would hesitate, freeze or your hands would shake so much you'd be a danger to yourself or others - but not the perp. Decent aim - BBBAAWWWWAAAHHHHAAAA!!!!! You are truly a piece or work. |
Gun saves another day
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