Look at the placement of the tape, left index 4 example is placed on the trigger guard and its under some serious stress, alot depends on the shooter grip on the pistol shape and other less crucial factors. Still as a right H shooter left index, right middle finger near to the base...Ben there is taped on the right base of the thumb that i think that is to get some protection from the beavertail friction... Any way as soon as you get into this sport you will definitly understand it by your self. I hope this will give you some insight 👍.
When practicing draws and reloads at the volume, speed, and intensity it takes to be a GM (or to level up quickly), the tiniest imperfections can add up to blisters. Big mistakes can lead to skin tears. Here's an example: instagram.com/p/CScr-Exi29Y/
Shoot handguns with the solid intent of serious training, and the gun will tell you where to tape up your hands. Much like learning where to apply lubricant to two sliding surfaces by observing the location wear marks of each.
@@AAlphaMike My opinion is that if you start to see degradation in performance, either objective (shot timer), or subjective (loss of confidence) due to distractions from pain, then tape it up. A callus is just your body conforming and toughing to stimuli, so the presence of one should not be a big deal. If you have skin ripping or tearing, then tape, grip adjustment, gun modifications, or even a different, better fitting gun would be in order.
IIRC, he writes in his book that amongst top level USPSA shooters, it is not uncommon for them to appear to flinch in response to recoil, but the key is that it happens after the shot breaks and not before. Its purpose is to control recoil and it isn't a mistake.
Everyone flinches unless they are shooting a gamer gun or suppressed. The difference is bad shooters flinch before or during. Good shooters will flinch AFTER. It takes years and years to get that down.
Thank you for your your immense wisdom Mr.Stoeger
This channel is just taking Ben’s videos
Thank you again
I am just bi curious I mean curious who is the person behind the curtain releaseing those videos? 🔫 everyday
Why do you tape your fingers?
Look at the placement of the tape, left index 4 example is placed on the trigger guard and its under some serious stress, alot depends on the shooter grip on the pistol shape and other less crucial factors.
Still as a right H shooter left index, right middle finger near to the base...Ben there is taped on the right base of the thumb that i think that is to get some protection from the beavertail friction...
Any way as soon as you get into this sport you will definitly understand it by your self.
I hope this will give you some insight 👍.
When practicing draws and reloads at the volume, speed, and intensity it takes to be a GM (or to level up quickly), the tiniest imperfections can add up to blisters. Big mistakes can lead to skin tears. Here's an example: instagram.com/p/CScr-Exi29Y/
Shoot handguns with the solid intent of serious training, and the gun will tell you where to tape up your hands. Much like learning where to apply lubricant to two sliding surfaces by observing the location wear marks of each.
@WRXXXual I'm developing a callous on my middle finger knuckle, do I tape it or change my grip?
@@AAlphaMike My opinion is that if you start to see degradation in performance, either objective (shot timer), or subjective (loss of confidence) due to distractions from pain, then tape it up. A callus is just your body conforming and toughing to stimuli, so the presence of one should not be a big deal. If you have skin ripping or tearing, then tape, grip adjustment, gun modifications, or even a different, better fitting gun would be in order.
💥What?💥💥💥💥What? 💥💥💥💥💥What?
Am I the only person that notice that massive flinch on the lightstrike? I have that same problem so I'm not judging
lol nobody tell him
IIRC, he writes in his book that amongst top level USPSA shooters, it is not uncommon for them to appear to flinch in response to recoil, but the key is that it happens after the shot breaks and not before. Its purpose is to control recoil and it isn't a mistake.
Everyone flinch, that is natural human response. The different between a master class shooter and a novice once is the timing of the flinch.
Everyone flinches unless they are shooting a gamer gun or suppressed.
The difference is bad shooters flinch before or during. Good shooters will flinch AFTER. It takes years and years to get that down.
Since he can’t shoot in uspsa matches and IPSC he has to make money somewhere.
Why can’t he shoot in those competitions?
@@jazzcat1056 he was banned from the USPSA, which also means he”s banned from IPSC (which is the governing board)
@@gordonblank6845 why was he banned?
@@jazzcat1056 He was bad mouthing the USPSA organization. It’s been going on for a long time.
@@gordonblank6845 ok thanks. I just bought his book. Looks like it can help me.