I did the math out of curiosity and in the given situation the impact would have been 4" behind the aiming point. (1250 fps bullet traveling 10 yards takes 0.024 seconds. A 10 mph object travels a little over 4 inches in that time.)
If you can't shoot a moving target, shot a plate rack while keeping the gun in motion the whole time or a few paper targets side by side moving across them
You are correct, and the student's goal is to hit within the 8" circle. But by using targets of this size, the student can see where the mistake was made and make the appropriate adjustments. There are also not many 12" wide targets available for sale.
Great class Ernest, wish I was there. Thanks!
Good training!
Very good info
Totally awesome class. I hope to take it 10 more times.
you're a great student and hard worker!
Thank you so much for providing such valuable information. Looks like you got the Tier 1 guys in your videos. Excellent shooters...
The @Tier1Concealed guys are awesome!
I did the math out of curiosity and in the given situation the impact would have been 4" behind the aiming point.
(1250 fps bullet traveling 10 yards takes 0.024 seconds. A 10 mph object travels a little over 4 inches in that time.)
Get on a treadmill… try and sustain a 10mph run. That’s moving for a human! Average walking pace is 3-4 mph. Makes a huge difference!
Great drill not sure where I could practice that
If you can't shoot a moving target, shot a plate rack while keeping the gun in motion the whole time or a few paper targets side by side moving across them
The problem with those Targets is, they represent someone sidestepping.
If they're running to left/right, the Target Width is only ~12".
You are correct, and the student's goal is to hit within the 8" circle. But by using targets of this size, the student can see where the mistake was made and make the appropriate adjustments. There are also not many 12" wide targets available for sale.
Rabbits.