- Location
- Somewhere on the Hudson Bay Coast
people main issue is reloading under stress, reloading and shootging when there is a barrier.
Tac shotgun is my main thing and have been doing it fo alot of years, but you have to reload evey second you not shooting , if you gaming V doing it for real, that meen reloading for cover .
You may want to do lots of left of barrier week side shoting.
Low and prone shooting as well as tac reloads
how you place you ammo on the firearms is allso very important.
Come to one of the One shot tactical shotgun courses and you will be supprised at what you dont know! And what earl can show you.
Earl will come to you if you have a range and a group of people.
bbb
I agree, reloading under stress should be a key part of shotgun training. Not only reloading, but slug select drills, and using your particular gun's action as efficiently as possible. For example, in a slug select drill, (or to load any type of shell other than what the gun is loaded with, do you load through the ejection port or the magazine of your particular gun? An 1100/11-87 or an 870 or 500/590 its better loading through the magazine, because as soon as you pull back the bolt, the subsequent round pops out of the magazine onto the carrier, so it might as well be the round you need rather than rolling a shot cartridge out of the gun, then loading the slug through the ejection port. With a Benelli, thanks to its drop lever, it allows you to trap the slug between the fingers of your support hand and the groove in the forend, so when the cocking piece is pulled back, the chambered round is ejected but no shell is released from the magazine, then the slug is slid along the side of the gun until it enters the ejection port, and the bolt handle is released chambering the round. That's pretty slick and pretty quick.
When you reload, can you do it without taking your eyes off the target? Do you index the rounds along the bottom of the trigger guard to avoid missing the loading port? How do you hold the gun when reloading it? If the butt is in your shoulder and you let the muzzle droop towards the ground, the gun comes to a balance when the muzzle reaches 45-60 degrees from horizontal allowing easy reloading, and the gun can be brought back into action far faster than when its taken down from your shoulder.
Do you cycle the rounds through the chamber to empty your shotgun? There are better options, one is to pull back the bolt ejecting the chambered round and allowing the first round ion the magazine to pop out onto the carrier, then roll the round out of the gun into the palm of your hand. the subsequent rounds in the magazine can be unloaded the same way or the shell stop can be tripped allowing the shells to drop free of the magazine tube.





















































