Madness said:.6 for a draw and 2 A's? That would mean the draw had to be .5 or faster.
A fast draw is cool to see but there is only one draw on a stage or string, an it doesn't always involve a holster or a shot right off the start. So the question is, How important is a 1 second draw? Take a 5 stage 100 round match, all stages are 1 string. So in the match you draw 5 times, take 100 shots and depending on how the stages are set up you reload 5-15 times. Where are you going to see a better return on you practice time? On time saved on a quicker draw, reload, or faster shots/transitions/acquisitions?
I'm not saving don't practice draws just don't neglect other areas just to get the fastes draw.
SUPERMAG said:The draw fire 2 A's at .6 secounds was done by one of the posters who already replied was a few years ago and distance was only 1 meter. Maybe he'll remember now.
That years Topgun Director
Quigley said:It was either Alex or Rob...(if I recall correctly)
relliott said:Just remember that the harder you push and the faster you go, the closer you get to the edge. Cross that edge in a match and you end up throwing away a match win to possibly gain what, maybe an extra two tenths of a second on a static draw? Or maybe a fumble followed by a miss or a D hit. A more important question would probably be, "How fast can you CONSISTANTLY draw and fire an A at any given distance?"
I can snatch draw a single at ten to fifteen meters in around .8 second if I warm up to it, but that is a completely useless number as I can't do it....and wouldn't even dream of trying....in a match. In a match, I would be looking at anywhere from a second to 1.2, but that would be a pretty bankable number, and it wouldn't be using a snatch.