miconoakisland
New member
Well...
Here's what I'd do if, heaven forbid, it ever came down to it.
I'd "zipper up" on the BG, meaning I'd start at the waist/pelvis, then work my way up to the head with each subsequent shot.
I have found that during rapid, surprise firing exercises that each shot goes just a bit higher due to recoil and less time is taken bringing the muzzle back down to the original poa.
During these exercises I usually expend around six shots. I'm not going to fire two shots COM then take time to re-evaluate to see if a head shot is needed. If I hit the pelvis area and it is effective, the BG will start to go down, so maybe the third shot will be a head shot.
For me, I realize my tendancies, and have adapted my "panic scenario". If I'm in such a situation where I need to fire, I will, but will start at the bottom and work up as quickly as possible. I just want the BG to go down and stay down!
I learned early playing Pop Warner Football to watch the hips while going in for a tackle, the head, shoulders, arms may say one thing, the legs and feet another, but the hips never lie about where he is going.
I'm just going to try to hit a blob of BG at the end of my front sight and I think this method is the best way for me to do that most effectively. It incorporates all previous post techniques while factoring in the rapid fire creep upwards during stress. I aim once at the right front thigh area (BG's right) and just rapid fire naturally (I tend to fire high and just slightly right during quick stress rapid fire).
Just something else to consider.
Here's what I'd do if, heaven forbid, it ever came down to it.
I'd "zipper up" on the BG, meaning I'd start at the waist/pelvis, then work my way up to the head with each subsequent shot.
I have found that during rapid, surprise firing exercises that each shot goes just a bit higher due to recoil and less time is taken bringing the muzzle back down to the original poa.
During these exercises I usually expend around six shots. I'm not going to fire two shots COM then take time to re-evaluate to see if a head shot is needed. If I hit the pelvis area and it is effective, the BG will start to go down, so maybe the third shot will be a head shot.
For me, I realize my tendancies, and have adapted my "panic scenario". If I'm in such a situation where I need to fire, I will, but will start at the bottom and work up as quickly as possible. I just want the BG to go down and stay down!
I learned early playing Pop Warner Football to watch the hips while going in for a tackle, the head, shoulders, arms may say one thing, the legs and feet another, but the hips never lie about where he is going.
I'm just going to try to hit a blob of BG at the end of my front sight and I think this method is the best way for me to do that most effectively. It incorporates all previous post techniques while factoring in the rapid fire creep upwards during stress. I aim once at the right front thigh area (BG's right) and just rapid fire naturally (I tend to fire high and just slightly right during quick stress rapid fire).
Just something else to consider.