http://www.defense-training.com/quips/29May09.html
NTI, 2009
29 May 09 NTI, 2009, Harrisburg, PA: This year's NTI is winding down. I shot Main Events yesterday. Team, scenario-based Events are on Saturday morning. Lots of good presentations by familiar sages, including Tom Givens' wonderful review of actual shooting involving his students. Not to be missed! This year, I fired the first three stages with my S&W 386NG, a scandium, seven-shot revolver, tuned for me by Master Revolversmith ( and good friend) Denny Reichert. Backup was my Taurus Judge, carried in Blackhawk's wonderful shoulder-holster. S&W Revolver was loaded w/Cor-Bon DPX 38Spl. I carried a single HKS speed-loader. Judge was loaded with Federal 410 000 Bk (four pellets). Guns and ammunition all ran fine. Live-fire stages this year were: Country Kitchen: You enter a Country Kitchen in response to a call from your wife to meet her there. I encountered several lethal threats upon entering and gunned them all down, but ran out of ammunition quickly. While behind cover and reloading my revolver, another threat emerged from a side-room and advanced on me. With no time to complete my reload, I abandoned my 386 and drew the Judge. A single discharge of 000 Bk instantly terminated the threat! I then complete the reload I had started and, with no time to reholster the Judge, took it into my left hand, with my S&W still in my right! As I started moving once more, I encountered yet another threat at close range as I rounded a corner. I'm not sure exactly why, but I extended both revolvers and shot them simultaneously. The target crumpled precipitously! A moment later, I confronted a man armed with a large knife at a range of ten feet. However, he was wearing a logo apron, and I concluded that he might just be a cook and thus represent no threat to me. A verbal interchange quickly confirmed that, and I commanded him to run out the back door and get out of my life, which he was more than happy to do! In the restaurant, there were many non-targets, some seated and some standing. All had to be quickly scanned and evaluated as I was moving from cover to cover. The lesson here was that one must keep moving, keep his head up, and, even when disposing of threats, always be looking for the next threat. I love that smooth-shooting 386NG, but a seven-shooter runs out of ammunition pretty fast! Once again, I was reminded of the inherent advantages of sixteen-shooters!
Skills Demonstration: In this Drill, each Practitioner is required to engage multiple targets from point-blank to six meters. All segments start from the draw In one segment, when repeated hits to the torso are not forthcoming with good results, one must shift the point of impact to the head. Again, I shot all segments with the S&W revolver. On one occasion, after running out of ammunition, I was compelled to default to my back-up pistol.
Office Party: Here, you are invited to an office party, but you have no weapons on you. The rooms are full of party-goers, and suddenly there are loud, threatening voices and a single gunshot. There are two rooms. One is brightly lit and one is dim. You enter through the dim room. The exit is in the lighted room. I saw one party-goer with a baseball bat. I shoved him aside and took the bat. No one else appeared to represent a threat, but there was a dead body with a pistol in his mouth. Likely suicide. It was simply a matter of moving through minglers and getting to the exit. Upon exiting, I encountered a police officer who commanded me to drop the bat, which I did! On the floor, there was a discharged Taser (non-police version). I decided it would be of no use to me, forgetting that I could still use it as a contact weapon in an effort to move people out of the way.
Gold Course: You arrive at the Gold Course for a lunch-meeting with your wife. She is in a wheel chair. As I approach her car, I saw an RPG rocketing toward it! I moved as fast as I could away from the car and then ran toward the clubhouse in an effort to find my wife. Upon arriving, she is seen in her wheelchair, flanked by two Kalashnikov-wielding terrorists. Around the corner of the building, and at a range of eight meters, I gunned down both terrorists. This time, I was using my SIG P250 (9mm) and Cor-Bon DPX 115gr ammunition. I then see three more likewise-armed terrorists at a range of fifty meters and carefully engage each. It is a long shot, but my SIG had no difficulty. Fifty meters is a long shot for most pistols and a skill that we ll need to practice now and then!
Casino: In this challenge, you enter the casino alone and try to, once again, rescue your wife from thugs and terrorists. In this drill you are in a multi-room building, set-up on a 360 degree range, so you can move and shoot in any direction. Several times, I had to opportunity to shoot a armed thug in the back, as I saw him before he saw me. I did not hesitate! One terrorist, bearing explosives, I was compelled to shoot in the brain-stem. A number of my shots were one-handed, as I had to find, and then carry, my injured wife. At one point, while moving backward, I tripped over a body and fell. No way to do this gracefully! I got up and continued. This Drill always gets me in a high state of vigilance and aggressive movement. A door flung open to reveal a man with a pistol in his hand. Catching sight of his gun out of the corner of my eye, I spun and shot him instantly. Only then did I see that he was a uniformed security guard. Such mistakes are easy. Too easy!
Train Station: Finally, I am compelled to rescue another family member, this time at a train station. This is a rigorous and exhausting cover-and-movement drill, again 360 degrees! At one moment, I was confronted by three lethal threats at once. As fast as I could, I moved and fired until I took out all three. At another moment, I leaned against a wall, only to discover it was actually a door! It fell open, dumping me unceremoniously into the adjacent room. I rolled, recovered, and drove on. Again, in a fight, there is no time to feel sorry for yourself! Be careful what you lean on!
Scenario-based Exercises: In ATSA Village, we are exposed to four, confrontational incidents. Each Practitioner is equipped with a revolver and Simmunitons cartridges. In most confrontations, aggressive verbiage and movement will suffice to get you successfully disengaged. In one case of the four, I was compelled to shoot my way out. I got shot once in the process. No matter how skillful you are, once shooting starts, there is a good chance you will be hit! Tom Given's advice rings true: Be armed! Sometimes, lethal force is the only viable option. Have at least one high-powered pistol (loaded with high-performance ammunition) and at least one reload with you all the time. Deliberately not having that option available is equivalent to painting yourself into a corner. Be alert! The sooner you get into the loop, the better choices you are going to make. Hit! Hit first and hit fast. There is no substitute to personal competence and practiced weapons skills. Indecisive ditherers have no chance. More later! /John
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created on Friday May 29, 2009 23:59:1 MDT
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