Not everyone likes to make content and edit videos. It takes a lot of work to focus on recording and it takes away from training. I shoot 20,000+ rounds a year. Have i mastered the handgun? Im not even sure what that means? I shoot USPSA and i get 1st place a lot. I can shoot a bill drill in 1.44 seconds. Does that mean i mastered it? I have no clue what that means. Do i think i can outshoot you? Absolutely.
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
Oh this video is just bringing the chest pounders out of the woodwork. Whatever! Clearly folks are missing the point of it all. To each his own.
@Knight_of_the_Old_Code
2 ай бұрын
That amount of hubris will eventually bite you in the rear. Point of the video, at least how I took it, is no matter how good you may get, there is always room for improvement. You will never stop being a student.
@musicman1eanda
2 ай бұрын
That your bill drill time at 7yds, all alphas? That's quite impressive. My best is 1.9 from concealment and I jumped for joy that day lol.
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
I like these types of drills because they are real life relevant and yet crossover into competition numbers too.
@BullseyeBallistics-kf1jw
2 ай бұрын
@@musicman1eanda Yes, 1.44 OWB with a CZ 75b and 1.50 from appendix with a CZ P01 🤘
@Hiddencomment007
2 ай бұрын
I was debating on writing this and dont need a response, nor do i expect one, but I'm hoping you take this positively for future videos. I don't know why you entertain the silly comments more than the real ones. Maybe you can't tell when someone is messing with you. It's more than likely a young, arrogant kid who doesn't know anything about shooting and is just trolling to see if you'll talk about it. The class videos you bring us on are great. I thoroughly enjoy them and always watch them in their entirety. Your range videos, the ones i see, usually seem to be about what someone says in the comments, which visibly annoys you enough to make a video instead of ignoring the nonsense. I'm sure im not the only one who notices this, and you can see it for yourself because you always say the same thing... someone in the comment section said this... (insert comment). I dont know who that's helping. But if it's helping you to vent, then good, it's your channel to do as you please. I just thought you wanted to teach. Instead, you're easily triggered by silly comments, which cuts into teaching and viewers wanting to watch. You don't have to respond to those comments. I know if i dont like it, then i can leave. This isn't meant to be a mean comment, so take it how you will. Im just giving feedback from something I've noticed over the past months and decided to mention it when i normally wouldn't say anything. Anyway, that's all i got. Get those guns out and practice🫡
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
I can't say I fully agree to your statements but you made your point relatively well. Thank you.
@thefreedomwarrior
2 ай бұрын
I can only afford a 6k a year 9mm budget and have for about 22 years. That is just over 100 rounds a week so I must make my rounds count. A timer is a must. Now I have to share that with 4 of my children that are of age to train. Rifle has been reduced to 2k a year (556) not counting long range precision that I make myself. I tell many friends and family that come to my personal range that they will never master the pistol. I actually believe (for me) that precision rifle is easier, but I only go out to 830 yards as that is all i safely have room for. I train pistol the most because is is by far the hardest. It’s actually frustrating how quickly you can loose your edge. Anyway. God bless brother.
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
I'm fully with you on that. Today my wife and I are taking our kids to the range. Our son loves to just pull the trigger as fast as he can without conscious thought of what he's doing. I keep telling him to slow down and keep his eyes open. But he just closes his eyes every time the gun goes off and he burns through ammo. I am trying to train him through it but it's tough.
@musicman1eanda
2 ай бұрын
6k of 9mm and 2k of 556 is fantastic man. That's like a $220/month average ammunition budget. And you have your own private range!? You're very blessed.
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
I'm blessed that this is not only my passion, but also my job.
@thefreedomwarrior
2 ай бұрын
@@musicman1eanda Thank you. Yes, God has blessed me with a farm snd land so i share it with friends and family and church family. But, when you have a full time job and a farm you don't take vacations (haven't in 24 years) so i make my farm a place id want to vacation to. Farming is not a business, it's a disease. -My grandfather 1995
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
I used to have acreage too. I kept it vacation worthy. It was the place that friends and family came to vacation. It was where we had three trampolines in a triangle pattern and the kids launched themselves through the air with glee. We had a massive garden bursting with veggies and produce. We had a 100 yard by 50 yard range with lush green grass. I loved it! Then we had to sell and move and life hasn't been the same since. If God grants me that paradise again I will cling to it with both hands.
@matthewtilley5500
2 ай бұрын
I think mastery of the handgun is attainable and does exist. I don’t think perfection and mastery are necessarily the same thing. However, handgun shooting is very perishable and even masters have to constantly work to maintain that skill.
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
So true, skills degrade rapidly with the handgun.
@jammedyouup-8619
2 ай бұрын
I mastered myself. That was the real trick to learn...
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
Oorah!
@RetARMYjohn
2 ай бұрын
I would like to overshadow the negative “I know I’m a great shooter” comments and say thank you for your time and knowledge on this subject and in all your videos! Please keep it up! I fire over 1,200 rounds a month and still love to learn and I wish others would be more open to constructive criticism as it is the only way to advance! Thanks again brother!
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
Well spoken.
@maxmccain8950
2 ай бұрын
I used to fire about 15,000 a year but the older I get it seems the less I shoot. Making a concerted effort to practice more.
@musicman1eanda
2 ай бұрын
I'm on a tight budget, so most of the year, I'm only going to the range once a month and shooting about 150-200 rounds. It's a shame because back when I was a new gun owner in 2016 and didn't know shit, I could afford to shoot 250 rounds 3-4 times per month. Such is life 😂
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
At least you're going to the range. Most people only hit the range one or two times in a year.
@Knight_of_the_Old_Code
2 ай бұрын
I'm right there with you, my friend. I can generally go twice a month. Any more than that is a luxury due to family responsibilities, finances, etc. Like you, and knowing what I know now, back in my single days, I would've taken my shooting and training a heck of a lot more seriously!
@wolverineqtg976
2 ай бұрын
Gotta role those elbows in brother, stabilises the dot with no muscle strain
@joshuataft5541
2 ай бұрын
I focus on pistol the most because thats what i have 99 percent
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
Correct!
@thefreedomwarrior
2 ай бұрын
@@joshuataft5541 Amen
@ssniadach012
2 ай бұрын
The handgun is relative to the way Bruce Lee trained , he stated " If you put limits on what you can do, physical or anything else, it will spread over into the rest of your life. There are no limits, there are plateaus, but you must not stay there, you must go beyond them." the only way to achieve this is through training the mind and body.
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
Well said. In the book by Rich Nance called "GunFIGHT!" he sights a little known fact that Bruce Lee carried a .38 revolver in his waistband. Once he was asked why, and he responded "because I can't kick a man in the head from across the street."
@joshuataft5541
2 ай бұрын
Its getting harder to find spots to practice without private land .sux.. 🙏👍🇺🇸🙏👍
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
Yes it is.
@Knight_of_the_Old_Code
2 ай бұрын
Luckily, I get to train twice a month. More than that is a blessing/luxury. My wife and I have four children all under the age of 10 including a 7 month old, so monetarily and with family obligations, it's just not feasible for me to shoot every week like I would love to. I invested in steel targets and a shot timer, and it has been invaluable in my training. I take many of your drill videos and do what I can with what I can. God bless, and keep the content coming, good sir!
@phillipcox446
2 ай бұрын
I also have an aims surplus slide also. I was just wondering what holster you are using. I can’t seem to find any that fit. Thanks!
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
This is one that was made for me in the old school Kydex bending ways. You need to search for someone making old school taco style Kydex out of thin sheets. They give enough for you to get a decent amount of retention out of it.
@michaelmoran8780
2 ай бұрын
Appreciate you sharing the wealth of knowledge you've built up training all these years👍🇺🇸
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
It's my pleasure.
@RonnieTallud
2 ай бұрын
Why do i have to have a channel or content To shoot 100k rounds
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
What?
@gleamtarrest6310
2 ай бұрын
I have an awful habit of pinning the trigger to the back of the gun and keeping it pinned till the gun settles back down..
@10xshooters
2 ай бұрын
Mastering the mechanics of shooting so more of a challenge then being a master of a shooting platform.
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
@gleamtarrest6310 I used to do the same thing. In fact I think I do it in this video. I have finally gotten out of that habit. It'll take some practice but you can program that out of your psyche.
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
@gleamtarrest6310 truth!
@miltonoliver3705
2 ай бұрын
If you are good handgun shooter you will be a great rifle shooter, my goal is to become a great hand gun shooter, rifles are easier strike to be great shooting the hand gun and i dry fire 5- 6 days a week and live fire weekly, since ive been dry firing my shooting had improved significantly
@carlc5131
2 ай бұрын
I worry more about my strength and fighting skills than about my handgun skills. 150 rounds a week and a lot of dry fire... I am no master class shooter by any stretch, but I am a handful in a street fight. Thanks for the drill!
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
Love it! Well said, Carl.
@zachgregory1289
2 ай бұрын
Now you will have to use the word “careful” instead of slow. Or Jedi will haunt you.
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
True!
@cnclife2739
2 ай бұрын
Should be always pushing time and accuracy. You can always go faster and do it more accurately.
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
Yeah but the basics need to be there. I attend a lot of training and am routinely bested by Shooters who aren't anywhere near as accurate as I am. But, because they shoot faster than I do and only miss an acceptable percentage of their shots, the aggregate of the two ends up beating me. I don't have a problem with that because I don't care about getting patches or stickers. What I care about is accuracy balanced against speed, not a balance of the two. For me accuracy is first and foremost, then speed. I've seen this for many years; the vast majority of new shooters don't fully understand that those missed rounds are a disaster waiting to happen down range. Speed seems to be the only focus these days.
@cnclife2739
2 ай бұрын
@Tier1Citizen I agree. I speed up when my accuracy is good. Like scott says, do you need a 1 sec Draw? Only if you have a 1 sec problem. It's not hard to shoot accurately, speed it what changes things. I agree, you can't focus on speed and disregard accuracy.
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
Yep!
@raymondrodarte1678
2 ай бұрын
You can definitely master the handgun bro believe in yourself maybe try shooting more than one round at a time try shooting fast up close and then stepping back to 15 yards but continue to try to shoot quickly if you're having trouble with the Glock the M&P 2.0 has a bit of a easier trigger to use also the CZ polymer Striker fire guns aren't too bad also dry fire is key the only time I really shoot live ammunition is in competitions every other week so maybe 300 to 400 rounds a month but I dry fire for about an hour every day I personally enjoy it now but when I was first starting out it was pretty boring cuz I just didn't know what I was doing but if you do have the money to shoot a lot I would recommend competitions as many as you can do remember slow is slow and fast is fast believe in yourself and one day I promise you can be as good as me🥰🥰🥰
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
I appreciate your vote of confidence but I am not the one saying these facts. Those words came to me from people who have been doing this sort of thing longer than I've been alive. The handgun is not something easily mastered or even easily maintained at a level of efficiency that would yield 90% accuracy. It is a constant struggle just to maintain the basics and deliver them under pressure.
@forcesolutions4154
2 ай бұрын
Abner - please do not close your mind to what Ben has to offer. He trains more than just competition folks. And what he teaches has application outside of competition. Same as with Jedi (who you did train with). I’ve trained with both and found benefits from both.
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
I will reach out to Ben and see if he teaches any combatives type of shooting. If he does, I'll go train with him. Remember, that just because someone trains LE/MIL means that they're training people who need something that they can't quantify. People are seeking answers to questions they don't know they have. I know what the questions are and also know a fair amount of the answers.
@forcesolutions4154
2 ай бұрын
@@Tier1Citizen He doesn’t teach anything to do with combatives. He teaches shooting at a high level. It’s up to the user to apply that to their specific application.
@forcesolutions4154
2 ай бұрын
@@Tier1Citizen Also, I would be remiss if I didn’t say that I appreciate you, your point of view, and your content. Most Respect to you, Sir.
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
@forcesolutions4154 Thank you for your kinds words regarding my video content. I do my best to give you guys unfettered truth. Please forgive me that this is going to be so long but I keep having to have this discussion with people who think I hate competition shooting. Please read below if you want to know my views on this. You're correct, Ben does not teach combatives, or anything near it. That means that I will most likely never train with him. It's no reflection on Ben as a person. It's just that competition has no relevance for me. Bigger than that is the fact that it has no relevance to self protection. In fact the body mechanics and rules of competition shooting are antithetical to surviving a gunfight. What do I mean? In competition shooting we are trained to shoot from an erect posture because it aligns our eyes behind the optic and gives us the clearest view of the course of fire. In combatives, standing upright makes us a bigger target. In combatives we learn to shoot with a forward cant to our bodies, and our legs are loaded and ready to move. We know that we sacrifice some of the visibility of standing erect but we are much harder to hit in this stance. In competition shooting we run with our muzzles pointed downrange at all times. That even means that we run with our gun trailing behind us as we run facing the opposite direction. In combatives, we turn and run and accept that we will, and must, muzzle those around us as safely as possible. We ensure this by not merely removing our finger from the trigger and registering it along the side. No, we go out of our way to register our trigger finger high up on the frame, or on the top of the slide, if possible. Range rules do not exist in a spherical 360° space, muzzling people is inevitable. As combatives practitioners we keep our gun in our field of view at all times. That is to say that when we turn and run with it, the weapon is facing the same direction that we are moving. We do our best to keep it muzzle up, or muzzle down, but, we turn and move with the weapon. We do this so as to mitigate the chances of a gun grab, or losing our firearm in a snag. In competition shooting, we are trained to shoot lots of rounds, across a large field of targets, while on the move. I’ll address this in a couple of steps. In combatives shooting we are trained to understand that the chances of us discharging more than five rounds in a gunfight is slim to none. Because of this, accuracy is of the highest importance to us. Also, we are trained that you are either moving, or you are shooting, you cannot do both accurately, so pick which one is more important at the moment. To understand how to pick which one requires training in threat management and proximity to a threat balanced against what that threat has wielded in your direction. That alone can encompass an entire day of understanding posturing, demeanor, efficacy of a given weapon at a given distance, etc. None of what I just mentioned is covered in competition shooting. It is not part of the curricula and those who enjoy competition shooting are unaware of what they do not know. And yet we combatives practitioners are bludgeoned when we say "competition shooting has no relevance to combatives shooting." A prime example of this is something that occurred during a class I attended, recently, where the instructor asked me if I could see all of the targets from the position where I initially moved into? My answer was "yes." What I was really thinking was that the last couple of targets were partially obscured by a segment of wall, I knew that as a responsible practitioner of combatives I needed to full visualize the threat's body and position relative to what might be behind them. In the competition space it was all about being able to see the "A Zone." The instructor asked "if you can see the A Zone why would you move further across the range?" He was correct, from a competition stand point. It made no sense for me to move any further from the position where I was. So the next go around I hit all the targets by only moving one body position to the right of the starting point. Doing so shaved off two seconds from my time without any loss of accuracy. However, I knew that had this been combatives training I would have been lit up in the AAR as to why I did not move and visually clear the space past the threat, before engaging it. Those who are staunch believers that competition shooting is “it!” are failing to take my expertise in pistol craft, into account. I used to shoot IPSC, and now I don't. Why? Because I saw too much gaming going on. It's not as simple as saying that once the gun is out, it's all the same thing. That is an erroneous argument which allows one to ignore the facts. In competition, the guns are different, the draw is different, the stance is different, the load outs are different. The body movements are different, the staging of the course of fire is different, etc. That all has to be taken into account. You're either training in combatives or you're training in competition, the two are wholly different curricula. I'll stop there but I hope you're seeing why I can't train with anyone who's sole focus is competition. I would be throwing resources at something that has no relevance in my life. Competition is fun, but, it has no bearing on reality.
@forcesolutions4154
2 ай бұрын
@@Tier1Citizen Thank You for your considerate and thoughtful response. I always take something or some things away from watching or reading you. You are a critical thinker and that matters. As to combatives, or integrated combatives, etc. I am familiar with and have followed the works of Craig Douglas, Kelly McCann, Bob Kasper, Carl Cestari, Dave Spaulding, Gabe Suarez, Paul Gomez, Mark Denny, Kyle Defoor, etc. I’m just a nobody, merely a long time LEO and trainer who has tried to do better than what the agency gave me. As to Ben, as with Scott, he teaches shooting at a high level. You define your application and what you do with it is up to you. But just as if you are going to play hockey, you better be able to skate at a high level, if you are going to do self defense or combatives involving a firearm, you better be able to shoot at a high level. That is what people like Ben, Scott, Gabe White, JJ Raccaza, Rob Leatham, etc. bring to the table. They have NEVER been LE or MIL (apart from JJ, and what he did wasn’t a typical LEO role). Matt Pranka has some thoughts on this, that shooting is shooting. IMO and in my own experience, (some but not all) skills useful for competition are also useful for reality. And there are also a lot that aren’t. Absolutely aren’t. Regardless of this, consider that Ben was invited to teach at Matt’s former workplace to an org that has a long history of hiring competitive shooters to help them shoot better. Then they take those lessons and fold them into their kit bag and apply them as appropriate. Chuck Pressburg has related how on multiple occasions he needed to go to that secondary and employ it. The skills he got from Jerry M. Etc were very relevant to winning those encounters. Learning to shoot well is pretty important. And yes, there are more than 1 style of shooting (as you describe). A review of videos on YT obviously shows that reality is not necessarily similar to a shooting game. Self Defense for “average Earth people” is a very close range affair, typically. Kinda hard for someone to rob you from across the street. So you have to have that skill set as well. Also learn to do all the “other” things really well. Like MUC. If you can preclude the fight though good MUC skills, that’s a huge win. Regardless, seek out SMEs in those other realms and learn from them. You have to have skills other than just lethal force. And then find someone to help you put it all together, Craig perhaps being the premier guy on that currently. Sorry if this comes across as a bit disjointed, using a small screen. I’m agreeing with you, but there is I think also additional context and information that also come into play/can come into play and needs to be part of this larger discussion. In summary, shooting is only 1 part of the comprehensive package of knowledge and skills one should strive to attain for reality, hence the importance of integrated combatives. Most Respectfully,
@cnclife2739
2 ай бұрын
Let's see your wave grip Abner.
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
Scott and I talked about it and I showed him how I do a modified version of his grip. He watched me shoot and hit consistently and said "I don't have a problem with that." My hands are so huge and my chosen G17 is too small for me to full get into Scott's grip. What I do works well for me. However, it bears noting that I gave his grip an honest try, and that is what matters.
@cnclife2739
2 ай бұрын
@Tier1Citizen It's good you gave it a try. Gabe white says, good grip techniques fit in a small bowl, as long as your not doing things outside the bowl, your good. Everyone is different, big hands, small hands, ect. I'm at about 70% of Scott's grip. His class with lots of work has made me better.
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
Just the thing about pausing to find the dot, before pulling the trigger has helped dramatically.
@cnclife2739
2 ай бұрын
@Tier1Citizen You do a good job Abner. You shoot well. I think you got more in you(faster draw, faster splits and still maintain accuracy) I took stoegers advice in a class, push my speed until it feels uncomfortable. It's made me faster while still being accurate. Good job!!
@PnP-td1mt
2 ай бұрын
I shoot 500-1k a week and have like 3 videos on my channel 😆 Funny enough.. I know Brian and shoot with several of the guys that work for him. Kenji, Hunter, Sasha, James.. all of which can vouch for how much I shoot and my skills. Both shooting and armor/machining..
@PnP-td1mt
2 ай бұрын
Brian and I share an addiction which is 2011’s 😆
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
@PnP-td1mt If you are shooting that much and hang with Brian and his guys, I know I can speak for all here when I say that you need to have more content on your channel. You have knowledge to share and may not even realize it. That is how I got into doing videos. I had been to so many classes back in 2012 that a friend told me that I needed to share my knowledge. He was right. I here from people who share how these videos help them save money and increase their accuracy. You are part of a tribe that has a lot of knowledge to share. Please do so.
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
@PnP-td1mt I want one so bad but know that I can't afford to fully get into that sport.
@PnP-td1mt
2 ай бұрын
@@Tier1CitizenI whole heartedly disagree with the idea that someone shooting that much having a lot of content.. Content requires editing. Those claiming it doesn’t require time to edit is full of sh!t 😆 I typically use an insta360 mounted on my hat to record matches and training. The few videos I do have on my page are recorded that way.. if you know the people I mentioned simply ask them.. hell Hunter shoots a good bit more than I do and doesn’t share sh!t online.. for those that don’t know Hunter is the show room manager @ Aim Surplus. He is a GM USPSA shooter
@URMOMISCALLING
2 ай бұрын
Price of pistol build thanks
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
You factor in the cost of a retired LE pistol. The you factor in the cost of the Deluxe Carry package from AimSurplus.com. Then the cost of the optic and sights. My cost is hard to gauge because I have dealer status on various websites. Run those numbers for yourself and you'll see what it wrings out to.
@URMOMISCALLING
2 ай бұрын
@@Tier1Citizen thanks
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
Yeah man.
@allenhurt02
2 ай бұрын
Please take a Ben Stoeger class. It will change how you view training.
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
Yep Ben is one of the names people have mentioned to me several times. The problem is that his focus is competitive shooting. There is no validity there for a Tier 1 Citizen. I used to shoot IPSC, I get it, it's fun and exhilarating to run and gun. However, all that gear is not practical for concealed carry and combatives style shooting. It's game theory and I love doing it, but I focus on training for a fight in a parking lot where I might exchange three rounds, and the fight is over. Ben seems to be an amazing instructor but there is nothing there for the Tier 1 Citizen.
@robertklautky5334
2 ай бұрын
I getcha! But I disagree. Ben will teach you to shoot better if you do the work and gun handling is gun handling. He's not teaching tactics. In fact, I think I heard Matt Pranka say that the shooting part of an engagement at a high level happens in the background while you are concentrating on tactics. Training in competitive shooting is one way (not the only way) to ingrain those gun handling skills.
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
@robertklautky5334 You're not understanding the point of combatives training. Gun handling is not gun handling. Drawing a self defense pistol from concealment dramatically changes things. Drawing a racing gun from a comp rig is nothing like fighting with a handgun. No matter how many people tell me I'm wrong, I know that I am not. Competition has its place, however, it has no place in relation to "fighting in the hole." If the instructor in question is competition focused they are not going to come close to those things that have to be taken into account for combatives. The next argument people will make is "well instructor so and so is a former special forces operator, and he..." Those folks too don't fully understand combatives from the standpoint of the EDC practitioner. When your career has been involved in showing up to the fight in a Blackhawk with five other jocked up dudes, you are incapable of understanding how to teach how to fight in a Walmart parking lot against a carjacker. Combatives is a different animal than competition.
@musicman1eanda
2 ай бұрын
@Tier1Citizen The draw is different for a concealed carrier, but once the gun is out, wouldn't you agree that there are many principles and techniques that can apply to both shooting at a range or shooting in self defense? Once the gun is at full presentation, you still have the universal considerations of vision, transitions, grip, and trigger press. If you want to get better at those things, I think we can get the best bang for our buck learning from IPSC/USPSA champions and GMs who make a living focusing solely on shooting and being the best at shooting. We can go to other instructors with experience in tactics.
@robertklautky5334
2 ай бұрын
@@musicman1eanda yeah, that's well said.
@sonsofnewengland835
2 ай бұрын
To master a handgun, you have to DRYFIRE EVERYDAY for at least 1 hour. So that means 365 days a year. Joey Sauerland made GM and only fired 3000 rnds before MASTERING the handgun. Dryfire is where ALL the actual TRAINING happens. Live fire is just to confirm what you're doing is working. Live fire also confirms your grip is spot on for recoil control. All high level shooters in USPSA or IPSC dryfire MORE than they live fire. Ask ANY high level shooter. DRYFIRE is the number one thing anybody needs to do to improve there skillset. Go checkout Steve Andersons books or Ben Stoegers books. I went from C class to A class in 1yr and I shoot about 200rnds once a week or every other week based on my schedule. I compete in matches once a month. But I DRYFIRE DAILY. And I don't have a KZitem channel, but I have IG, I'm ASSETERIK556, you can check out my shooting there if you think I'm B.Sing you. Pistol skills diminish VERY quickly if you don't DRYFIRE daily. STOP depending on live fire.
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
Yep, dry fire confirms your grip, stance, optic acquisition, and trigger work.
@sonsofnewengland835
2 ай бұрын
@@Tier1Citizen literally everything. Even movement. There's NOTHING that can't be trained in dryfire. No need to fire a round if you can't meet a par time in dryfire. Any drill you have, you can practice in Dryfire. Wanna get your skills highly developed, do dryfire work. Dryfire is where the ACTUAL training should be happening. Livefire should be to confirm its working.
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
That is totally incorrect. You cannot train for everything in dry fire.
@sonsofnewengland835
2 ай бұрын
@@Tier1Citizen Out of curiosity, what can not be trained for in dryfire???
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
Nope, I've gone down this road before with people like you. You are just looking for an argument. I have too much work to do to present you with truth, then have you refute that too. By all means, continue to convince yourself that dryfire is the 100% fix for all things. I know otherwise. I've stood next to guys who are convinced that dryfre solves all, then the chaos of live fire turns their brains into mush.
@hez2k
2 ай бұрын
2 seconds to shoot from appendix is quite slow. I get you’re talking about combative situation. But taking 2 seconds aiming for a headshot isn’t real and they won’t be standing still. If it takes you that long you are already telegraphing your movements much like in fighting. Realistically first person to get a shot off hitting center mass will most likely win. There’s a reason top level operators are now taking classes from “gamer shooters”
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
@hez2k You are taking this as a direct attack on you as the responding shooter. This could easily be you witnessing them killing someone and know that the only shot you have is a headshot. If you disagree with me, put up your own video refuting what Im saying.
@kennethhart5393
2 ай бұрын
Agreed!!
@YEETUS_DELETUS_
2 ай бұрын
I disagree with the channel part. Not everyone wants to be on the Internet
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
Valid point, on that one I was off subject.
@joshuataft5541
2 ай бұрын
❤🙏🇺🇸🙏❤
@Fordgroup00
2 ай бұрын
Wow, what an ego. I thought this was gonna be a decent channel but man was I way off
@Tier1Citizen
2 ай бұрын
@Fordgroup00 Please convey what it is that I've said in this video that makes you believe that I am displaying an ego. Think before you speak, please.
@debluetailfly
2 ай бұрын
I can't afford to shoot up $24K of ammo/yr. But if I could, I wouldn't make videos. I have zero interest in having a utub channel. Content with watching others.
@stupidityonly478
2 ай бұрын
First 2 minutes on your channel, and already i know im not coming back.
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