Rob Leatham on accuracy and plate rack

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Couple videos with Rob Leatham discussing accuracy under time pressure and about shooting the plate rack. Some interesting drills to refresh the basics.

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I ran that first drill just before I left for the US Nationals, I hit 8 rounds before I really noticed I had to push the gun for faster splits and the sight tracking changed (Open Division) and the group started to open up.
 
I think Rob Could use some of my worst stages from the Us Nationals to illustrate common mistakes...hosing, etc....
 
I think Rob Could use some of my worst stages from the Us Nationals to illustrate common mistakes...hosing, etc....

Kind of an eye opener huh? There were no really difficult shots in that match and yet when you see the number of misses everyone (and I mean everyone including the super squads) had....
 
Just use a standard IPSC target and pay attention to the group size

The problem is acquiring the target. On a metal target he gets about 1.2..2" splash from each hit, which is clearly visible from 7y. That is not the case for a bullet hit trough paper target.
 
Damn, why all my misses were on the close targets? :-/

Your rushing the shot. Your moving the pistol to the next target as your pressing the trigger. After wards you ask yourself how you could have missed because you swear you saw a perfect sight picture on that shot. Truth is you did see a perfect sight picture but then you pressed the trigger and moved to the next target, by the time the shot want off the pistol was well away from your aiming piont.
This can be corrected by teaching yourself to not start your target transition till you see the sights lift after pressing the trigger
 
Your rushing the shot...

Unfortunately it is not that simple. I neglected to mention that most of those targets were swingers. Basically every time I hesitated on a static target after shooting activator steel and as a result, haven't had enough time for a second shot on a first swing of the swinger.
 
The problem is acquiring the target. On a metal target he gets about 1.2..2" splash from each hit, which is clearly visible from 7y. That is not the case for a bullet hit trough paper target.
I can see my holes clearly out past 15m...
 
I can see my holes clearly out past 15m...
I thought you're not supposed to look for holes, just calling your shots and follow through. :confused:

BTW I'm trying to rig something out of coroplast to replace steel in our club matches (training) because we cannot have steel. Paper targets are fine but having some practice with reactive targets would help to calm down in a real match.
 
Paper plates are actually pretty useful for ranges where no access to steel is permitted. You can set them up like a plate rack or use any other sort of presentation. The good thing about them is they force you to follow through on the sights and call your shots a little better since the temptation to look over the gun to watch the steel fall is removed.
 
I thought you're not supposed to look for holes, just calling your shots and follow through. :confused:

BTW I'm trying to rig something out of coroplast to replace steel in our club matches (training) because we cannot have steel. Paper targets are fine but having some practice with reactive targets would help to calm down in a real match.

Typically yes, but in this case you are using the original point of impact as an aiming point. When I run this drill I just shoot for the center of the IPSC target. Really this drill is more about tracking your sights so whatever method works for you...
 
Paper plates are actually pretty useful for ranges where no access to steel is permitted. You can set them up like a plate rack or use any other sort of presentation. The good thing about them is they force you to follow through on the sights and call your shots a little better since the temptation to look over the gun to watch the steel fall is removed.
That's exactly what I do: staple a row of five 8" plates to a cardboard. It has helped me a lot to hit the real thing and not to wait for visual or audio feedback. I didn't relize how many of my shots were low until I used paper plates.

Still, I'd like to come up with plastic poppers to add some reactive targets to our course. The Newbold mini-popper we have is very unreliable.
 
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