Monday, May 19, 2008

Range/Bullseye Report

Maybe it isn't such a good idea to practice so hard on League Night--I tire out my arm and my eyes by, essentially, shooting the equivalent of 7 relays before the official one. It's like playing seven scrimmage soccer games right before the real game on the same day--not a good idea. Maybe next time (i.e. next-next Monday--no MPL for Memorial Day) I'll just get to the range only an hour to half-an-hour early to warm up and nothing else...a couple rounds of rapid-fire, a round or two of slow-fire, nothing more.

Oh well.

Before MPL even started I put nearly 500 rounds downrange with my two revolvers. Decided I was doing better with my newly-acquired 17-8, so I chose that one to shoot tonight.

Slow-fire was...well, maybe a little disappointing. I still shot a 165, my second-best score, but I would've liked to have done better. I used my usual 3-shot strings--since I'm using open-sights, I'm not as concerned with being exactly the same between every shot...it gets tiring, and I don't feel comfortable setting up, shooting, and breaking down after every shot. My muscles seem happier to set up, shoot, shoot, shoot, break-down. 3 shots is about the maximum I can do before fatigue really sets in, but for those three shots it's easier to just keep the muscles going like they were instead of having to set-up every time.

Anyways. Timed-fire was even more disappointing, with at 179. A respectable score, sure, but 9-points below what I scored last week, and I put let far too many shots hit outside of the black--somewhat surprising, since in practice I was getting only about 3 or 4 outside of the black. Perhaps it had something to do with my tiring myself out before the match tonight.

Rapid-fire was OK today--176, 1 better than last week but still 10 points behind my best (186).

Overall, I secured 520 out of 600 points tonight, a 20-point gain (all due to a much better slow-fire) over last week, which earned me a 286 handicap score. Not bad...not top-4, but not bad. Next time (June 2nd) we're against the Navy Team, which should be easy, what with the Navy Team's personnel problems and lower-general scorers (last week they got a 1133, the week before they did a 1130-something, and the week before that they did 1140-something; my team regularly and easily scores in the mid 1150's)

My 3-week average dropped, however, to 256. Which means that next match, if I continue to do this well, I should have a much better handicap score.

Well, first things first. Next weekend there's no MPL match due to Memorial Day, and the weekend after that I'll be doing the Tahoe thing, so we'll see how this goes...

Range Report

this box of ammo is proving somewhat unreliable...a couple FTFires that would fire on the second try, a couple that wouldn't fire at all...not good for the timed- and rapid-fire, where I won't have time to "try it again". Tomorrow, I'll burn off this box and hopefully the next one will be better.

Couldn't rein in my hands today--rapid fire, I was still putting a few outside the black, some wildly-so. Still on-paper, but just barely.

I'll fix it tomorrow. Hopefully.

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On a side note, I'm getting all of these automated "happy birthday" messages from the various gun-forums I frequent. Must be my...oh wait, it is.

I'm 25 today.

Friday, May 16, 2008

Range Report

"That's a short night for you..." the Range Officer said as I was heading out. Indeed it was, as I needed to get home to prep my bike and stuff for tomorrow's ride.

But I still found 50 minutes to put 220 rounds downrange--100 rapid-fire through my 617, 100 rapid-fire through the 17, and 20 slow-fire through the 617. I actually did have one rapid-fire target with all 20 in the black, for a score of 195. And the one slow-fire target I shot had 18 on-target. Nice.

I should use rapid-fire as a warm-up from now on...just start off with it, to get my mind and body settled in. It's the more "frantic" of the disciplines, anyways, so it doesn't require me to be as steady as slow-fire, and timed-fire is basically sustained slow-fire.

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Range Report

Started off with my 617 at 75 feet, aiming at the large target...when I wasn't getting good groups, I switched to the smaller target and my groups improved. 200 rounds thusly. Then I switched to my 17-8, 100 rounds of rapid-fire. Then back to the 617 (which is definitely heavier, because of the all stainless steel cylinder, versus the 17-8's aluminum cylinder) for 100 more rapid-fire rounds. Then to the 17-8 for 100 rounds slow-fire (having been sufficiently warmed up with rapid-fire), and then the 617 for 100 rounds slowfire. Finished up with the 17-8 with 100 rounds, rapid-fire. All told, 700 rounds, and I'd been on the range for about two and a half hours. It felt good.

The guys beside me in lane 2 were practicing their IDPA draws and such (getting sub 1-second-draw-and-fire-once drills in--wow!), and they looked over and saw my targets and said "man, that's f*cking scary!". Hopefully that meant that they were impressed by my ability to score good hits on a target 50 yards away with a revolver and open sights. =)

Today felt good because all I brought was the 17 and the 617, and so that's all I needed to focus on. No other guns in my bag with their associated magazines and stuff. Just bring what I'll shoot, shoot what I bring, and leave the rest at home. Shoot those another day. Maybe. Maybe after Tahoe and after this Bullseye thing lets up.

Plus, I want to experiment with the ammo to see what will give better grouping, to see just how much the "shotgun patterns" on my targets are me, and how much is the gun+ammo. Right off the bat, I know that having that cylinder-barrel gap and cheap bulk-ammo probably means that I'm losing velocity as the bullet jumps the gap, and that the powder charge/bullet weight may not be consistent, and Bullseye is all about being consistent (and consistenly good).

Monday, May 12, 2008

Bullseye...or not

my downward-slide continues, but mainly in the slowfire--137 today, my worst ever.

I made up for it somewhat with my timed-fire, only letting two shots out of the black for a 188 (second best), and a decent rapid-fire at 175 for a face-saving 500, but if I don't do something about it...

I need to go back to where this was new and wonderful and exciting, that feeling I get when I'm flying down a mountain on a bike or a snowboard. Just the exhilaration of movement, of excellence. It was definitely lacking while I was shooting today's slowfire. Oh, I can list a bunch of 'reasons' why I'm not doing so well--lack of meaningful practice, aging eyeglass prescription, my equipment wearing down--but in the end it all boils down to me. Bullseye is an internal sport, it's all mental. After the external factors have been accounted for (sights adjusted, bullet-weight taken into consideration, foot placement OK, etc.), the only variable thing left, the only thing uncontrollable, is the internal state.

Somehow I need to master that...

Clip vs. Magazine

"Clip" vs "Magazine". Not that anyone's going to get it right anyways...

Friday, May 9, 2008

Stand Your Ground

This was today:

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Eric F.: dude someone pulled a knife on me today
me: seriously? when? where?
Eric F.: almost got himself shot
me: holy shit!
Eric F.: at the metro bus stop
Eric F.: I was alone in one of the covers
Eric F.: some kid rides up in a bike pills out a knife and opens it up
Eric F.: 6-8 inch
Eric F.: I didn't hear what he said because I was too busy watching the knife
Eric F.: but I stod up and told him "that is a bad idea"
me: you didn't draw on him, did you?
Eric F.: nope
me: move your hand near your sidearm?
Eric F.: he ran off
me: "make for your weapon"
me: whew
Eric F.: hehe
Eric F.: there were people around
me: the main part, probably, was that you stood your ground and were prepared to fight back
Eric F.: well I was to focused on the knife/scared shitless to hear what he said
Eric F.: probably though he would pull a knife a I would give him money
Eric F.: before people saw
me: good thing you didn't have to draw...
me: and I'm glad you're alright =)
Eric F.: hehe
Eric F.: so I called the police
Eric F.: they kept asking "what did he say?"
Eric F.: I am like he had a knife I don't care what he was saying
Eric F.: I don't know if they found him
Eric F.: probably didn't look
me: at least they know there's a guy going around with a knife
me: won't help much, though
Eric F.: yea
me: because they definitely know there's a guy going around with a gun--you.
me: heh
Eric F.: hehe
Eric F.: true true
me: wow, man, just...wow
me: one of those "never thought it would happen" sorta stories...
Eric F.: well I got 2 now
me: stories
Eric F.: house robbed
Eric F.: and knife
me: yeah
me: yay Alexandria...
Eric F.: heheh
Eric F.: I think the kid was just looking for an easy target
me: I'm quite happy that Invertix has moved out of Annandale...
me: probably
me: aren't they all?
Eric F.: yea
Eric F.: probably came from DC on the metro
me: they wouldn't do it if we were all hard targets...
Eric F.: true

Thursday, May 8, 2008

Range Report

got on the range and spent 30 rounds zero-ing my 617. Bench rested and everything...well, I didn't really bench the gun itself but my arms and the butt of the grip, so all I really had to concern myself (aside from the wobbly table) was the 2-handed grip and working the trigger. Turns out the sights were adjusted too high, for some reason, so I dropped it back down 2 clicks, and I was reliably getting 17/20 hits on paper, with 14 of those hits in the black (and good groupings in the 10/X rings).

Rapidfire is where it really helped out: my first RF target, I put 19/20 in the black. The rest of my RF practice was spent trying to duplicate that. Didn't quite work, though, as many of my shots were going low. They were all on-paper (I would hope so, with the target being so close) and all orbiting the black.

I actually got kicked off after an hour and a half because there were a lot of people there tonight, but it came at the right time. I was given the 5-minute warning just as I was running out of ammo to shoot, so it worked out anyways.

With tonight's shoot, my 617 has just surpassed 8,000 rounds through it, with 5,700 being shot in the past three months. Damn. At 10,000 rounds, I'll send it back to S&W for a tune-up and to get a target hammer and trigger fitted to it. So in about three weeks, basically.

A Moratorium

alright, alright, ALRIGHT!!! No more buying guns for a while! My bank account isn't made of money!

But I've found the perfect brother for my 617--a blued 17-8 10-shot 6" (my 617 is a stainless 10-shot 6"). Ebony and Ivory indeed.

And I'm entertaining another Ruger Mk. II, even though I just bought one last month and traded for another back in January.

Just collecting .22s, and all I ever shoot is the 617...

Bah! That 1911, 686, BHP, CZ75b, et al can wait! Christmas!

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Laetitia Daguenel

http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=h88mgtRDZf8
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=L9UfAB7y8ZA
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=GtoF0r_niu0
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=QZQDwRRhySQ

Laetitia Daguenel, French chick who can shoot. Dag, yo. Dag. Clearing the chamber and catching the ejected round. Dang.

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

Paco Kelly's Accurz'r

http://www.gunblast.com/Paco.htm
http://www.leverguns.com/store/acurizer.htm

Hmm...maybe I can wring more accuracy out of my 617 by fixing the ammunition for it? I'll need to see what kind of accuracy it has with the ammo, first.

Monday, May 5, 2008

Bullseye Pistol #8

Ugh...I didn't feel good about this one at all. I still posted an OK score: (S) 158 + (T) 178 + (R) 183 = 519. So still above 500 (out of a possible 600), but it was a 19-point drop from last time. And my handicap score wasn't all that great, either: 286.something. I'll be surprised if it makes the top-4 for my team (I seriously doubt it).

I've told the team captain that if I do this again (I wasn't specific as to what, but I meant that if my score is around the same place again, not getting a "good enough" scratch or handicap) I'll switch to an autoloader, like everyone else. Though at a certain point, it's more a problem with the shooter than the gun; I haven't shot this thing from a ransom rest at all, so I don't know exactly how accurate it is with the ammo I'm using, but I'm willing to bet that my shotgun patterns are a result of my unsteadiness, and not because of any inherent inaccuracy of the gun...

--

and on that note: what if only S&W made an L- or N-frame .22LR. Or even an X-frame...heh. Though I suppose it would probably be the most unwieldly weapon ever produced...or you could have enough metal in the cylinder to have 15 or 20 charge-holes. That would be funny...and probably not that useful. I just think I like the look of L- and N-frames much more than K-frames. I suppose this is all based on the look of the Colt Python, which Just Looks Right for a .357 Magnum revolver... Well, maybe a L-frame 10-shot revolver in .22WMR would actually make sense. Eh.

All this is a kinda roundabout way of saying that I'd like a S&W 686 (.357 Magnum) and a S&W 625 (.45ACP). And another 617 or a 17-8 as a "backup" for my current 617-6.

And a 1911 in .45.

Dammit! Broke! Maybe as a Christmas present...save up for it. One at a time.

An Interesting Observation

interesting observation:

Pro-Gun/use-of-guns-in-self-defense people: know that most people are good, will be good, but will acquire guns anyways in case a Bad Apple/Guy decides to do Bad Things to them. Believe in the best, prepare for the worst.

Anti-Gun/don't-see-the-use-of-guns-in-self-defense people: know that people are not infallible and will occasionally do Bad Things, so wish to limit access of guns to limit what Bad Things a Bad Apple/Guy can do. Believe in the worst, prepare for the best.

If that even makes sense.

Sunday, May 4, 2008

Range Report

met with Eric, Mr. Brian, and Alex and took two adjacent lanes. It was all big-bore today: 9mm out of my Beretta and Mr. Brian's new XD9 Service, and .40S&W out of my P7M10 and Eric's Glock 23.

I'm happy to report that I'm still a pretty decent shot with the bigger stuff, but that's probably a result of my very frequent range-visits. Doubletaps in 9mm were good...40, not so much. But I liked the XD9 a lot--if I was to get a plastic pistol, I'd get one of those. If I did, I'd have to think about a barrel-length--I like the longer versions of most pistols, but the practicality of the compact/sub-compact versions are appealing, too.

And we took out my rifle and shot that a bit.

Good times.

Thursday, May 1, 2008

Range Report

I go to the range now just to get trigger time and practice...I don't think there's much I can do to improve at this point. Of course, that could just be hubris. I do need some new glasses, as the anti-reflective coating on my current lenses is flaking off badly, and the prescription is nearly 3 years old. Maybe with new glasses, I can focus on the front sight more clearly (right now, everything is fuzzy...not just the rear sight and the target).

And I suppose I could work on being more consistent and steady--my current method is to lift the gun up, aim it, fire, aim, fire, aim, fire, and then put the gun down to rest. The idea being that I've already got my muscles set from the first initial aiming, and the second shot should be my best, and my third is riding the tail end of my strength, and then my arm starts to get fatigued after that and any more shots will be erratic. Perhaps, however, that I'm doing it wrong and I need to do it like the pros do: set up, aim, 1 shot, and then rest--for every shot in slow-fire. Though I don't have/use a scope, so how useful that technique will be with iron/open sights is debatable...

Anyways. Set up on lane 1, next to the other bullseye shooters practicing, and put 200 rounds downrange in slowfire, and 100 rounds downrange in rapid-fire. Then I got kicked off my lane (I'd been there for about 2 hours anyways).

I should get an MP3 player and load the bullseye range commands onto it and use that to practice, too.