I gotta admit following you for a while, you haven't changed. You've gotten better of course and continuing to evolve and get people talking and asking questions, but the way you speak on socials or lives your the same humble dude. Very refreshing in this industry or any for that matter. Most when they get notoriety and larger following the ego gets bigger and they start speaking in different tones, some of cockiness and some condescending. Your character and personality hasn't changed which as I said, very refreshing. Keep pushing the envelope and don't change or try to be someone else, just be you bro, your making waves. 🤙
Agree… not all alphas are created equal. Talk about that in my classes all the time. If my alphas print at different spot than I was looking, in training, I have to be honest with myself and figure out why that mistake happened!
For me it goes as follows -establish a baseline “perfect run” -push the speed until groups open up to outside A zones -unload, not some notes down and asses what happened and what needs work -work dry fire -reload and try again
I like to shoot 3-4 runs of whatever I’m working on. Then I “read” the targets and connect the dots to what I felt and was doing. Paying close attention to the cues gives me an immediate idea of what I’m doing right or wrong. Example moving left to right and hits are trending right tells me I’m not picking a spot and locking on it while I shoot. The result is me dragging shots to the right side of the target. In conclusion all A’s isn’t the goal. A good tight group in the spot I’m looking is the goal. Obviously still pushing speed to try and create new issues especially when I’m getting the “intended” result.
Great information. Grip and vision are my biggest focus in training right now. Especially vision. When dry firing on 1/3 or 1/6 dry fire targets I find it so much easier vision wise to pick a small spot to look because off A zone target sized. But when live firing and picking a small spot I’m just picking up brown a lot of the time. Without a physical vision aid like a square of blue painters tape my vision suffers
Idk anyone who I have listened to that has had to use a pistol in self defense said they never saw there sights because they were busy looking for intent of harm against them. So I guess it depends if your shooting for 3 gun accuracy or self defense. If it's self defense I would start point shooting and get good at that.
Accuracy is accuracy and anyone who says they didn’t use their sights, probably never trained to a high level to begin with. I’ve talked to plenty of cops who’ve been in shootings who’ve only confirmed that they’ve used their sights because they’ve trained to a high level.
@@VeloxTrainingGroup "Accuracy is accuracy and anyone who says they didn’t use their sights, probably never trained to a high level to begin with. " That is a loaded (pun intended) and short-sighted response. There is accuracy and then there is "good enough" accuracy. The range of the assailant matters. Bad breath distances sights will NOT be used (via eyes). Self defense distance is going to be point shooting - you will NOT be finding and verifying a full sight picture especially if someone is shooting back. Target distances require using sites. This is where the difference between civilian and LEOs is exposed. Civilians are trying to break contact and will rarely engage at target distance. LEOs must engage suspects at any distance to stop the threat...hence the use of sights more. Training to a "high level" includes different shooting positions, distances, scenarios, etc.
@@papimaximus95 couple things. First, I’m not talking about anything tactical related. I’m discussing shooting skills. Second is, and you’re welcome to take this however you like, if you think you’ll be to deliver your “accurate enough” shots if you ever need to by never practicing to a higher level in terms of speed and accuracy than that, I think you’re wrong. What’s being discussed in the video is a training strategy. Not a scenario, not anything tactical or self defense related.
@@VeloxTrainingGroup " First, I’m not talking about anything tactical related" But your response is that all accuracy is the same, you must use your sights to gain said accuracy and then you doubled down with a tactical scenario with respect to police officer shootings. Of course speed and accuracy matter - they are part of the same calculus. Speed is a function of accuracy and accuracy is a function of speed. The point is you need to train for all of it.
Confirmation at the farther target does not work this way. It would only work if you are shooting with your barrel perfectly parallel to the ground. If your sights are aligned from your eye level down to your target's chest level, you are aiming downward. So even if all your shots on the near target were perfectly center alpha, all your hits on the farther target would be lower. All your are revealing with this setup is an exaggerated spread at distance. I see where you are going and I think you're trying to make a good point. You're just overlooking one thing... perspective/angle.