Not a big fan of putting a non-dominant hand up against the slide like that. Feels like it would be very easy for that hand to make its way in front of the barrel under extreme stress. But, I suppose, if that hand is already shot in this hypothetical, what's one more bullet hole.
If your wounded hand is gushing blood wouldn’t you want to keep it away from the gun? I have read that blood will make your grip slick as snot. I wouldn’t want it to compromise my grip on the only good hand I have.
so pain, blood, shock, having a working hand after injury. i get it you try, but simple things can simulate a failed hand better than using a tennis ball.
My training buddies and I use tennis balls to simulate hand injuries just like that. It’s pretty effective. We simulate devastating shoulder injuries as well by simply zip-tying our support hand to our belts. That’s fun too.
Hey! I think it’s a velocity systems scarab. Looks like a velocity systems scarab. Might be a velocity systems scarab. Yeah, it’s definitely a velocity systems scarab. You know just in case it needed to be repeated again...
@@nightfury6836 Actually most instructors are now teaching to use the slide stop. Its a full second faster for a proficient shooter. This battlefield pickup argument is getting ridiculous. Regardless if he running the academy training then it makes more sense. Plenty of newbie cops.
Because when ur shot or getting shot at, it requires fine motor skills to hit such a small piece of gun to manipulate the slide forward. Racking the slide is always a constant
If you're clearing a malfunction you're almost never gonna have a slide that's locked back. Some guns have stiff slide releases, and if I already have a mangled hand/limb, odds are there will be blood on my good hand/firearm, making it even harder to drop a slide release since it may be slick. Especially true if your setup requires you to break your grip to hit the slide release. Plus, if your gun isn't ambi, and you only have your weak side, may be physically impossible to properly run a slide release/stop. Slide releases are definitely faster, however, if you're in a situation to properly use one.