The BEST Quarantine Training Tool.....EVER.

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hey everybody Jerry Mitchell Ike here I know we've been posting a lot of videos here recently and this social distancing phenomena and some of you guys have written on an email back and commented and say look man I just can't get to the Ranger ranges the close where I'm at so what I like to present to you right now is an alternative to actually live fire I'm old school kind of guy I get a bucket of bullets and I go out on the range I'm fortunate to live on the range so I guess you get a bucket of ammo and I go shoot and I look at the target but there's more advanced ways of doing things you have to remember I came back from the time I go back to the time of a rotary phone and I'm not everybody had a computer in their pocket so now we have all this high-tech equipment and what I want to show you today is one concept and one training method that you might want to do if you don't have access to a range or a bucket of bullets every day so mantis makes their X 10 shooting performance system and it's really trick we had two guys come in with us a few months back and showed us how to use the equipment so what I've done for mine is just to put a piece of Picatinny rail just super glue it to the bottom of the magazine and you can put the little Manus sensor right on the bottom of your magazine that way you don't have to have a specialty holster I'm just using my or my three gun host of here so I'm we're going to do some repetitions we're going to do five drawers out of the holster and we talked a little bit about trying to set yourself up to do this in the home or wherever you want to do your training yet first thing guys no live ammo you notice the magazine is completely empty there's no other magazines on my person the pistol is empty and in the position I'm gonna be doing my draw fire is out the side of my shop here and even if I was to introduce the live round into this scenario and fire it through the wall I've got two miles worth of wooded area here to contain it so safety is number one you can't check your equipment enough to make sure you haven't introduced a live round into your scenario if you got a range bag like me that's full of loaded magazines and junk and all kind of ammo laying around make sure you police your stuff have only one magazine you'd be surprised how easy it is to introduce a live round into your into your kit when you don't need it so safety number one the other thing we're going to talk about I know I'm preaching to you a little bit but firearm handgun firearm ownership probably the two most critical times of handling a pistol is when you draw it from a holster and when you return it to the holster so if you're out on the range and you're getting a you get a little bit fatigued or you get distracted you want to immediately stop when once you go live guys you can't have distractions this is to me when I have this in my hand it's just the same if I had a five foot rattlesnake in my hand I have to always be aware of where that head is going to be for that muzzle and I want to have control of it if you're daydreaming or you're bored or you get fatigued stop take a break come back the next day you can't do either one of those and achieve a level of performance or safety that's going to meet anybody's standards so just get that out of your brain if you bored don't do it if you get tired don't do it okay I'm finished preach it one thing you want to remember I'm gonna preach to you one more time one thing you always want to remember is when you draw that pistol that finger is never introduced into the trigger guard until the muzzle is parallel to the ground okay finger that's one of the things I've get there's a lot of new gun owners and the one thing you want to remember is when you grab that pistol you notice where my finger is it's out of the trigger guard every time I handle this gun do anything except shoot fingers out of trigger go god I know it's boring but it's safe same thing when you reintroduce it to the holster finger on a trigger guard and I come with my thumb on the back of the slide so when I ride it back in the holster and I'm gonna show you something else and I'm gonna flag it because I don't like to stick a muzzle anywhere I'm not needing to stick it so I'm flag I see a lot of guys when they go back to the host and when they're beginning they do this they want to grab the holster and make sure they get it in the host especially a lot of concealment type holsters you want to be aware you never want to have anything in front of the muzzle so if I put my weak hand right here and I grab the holster so when I go to sweep my gun back in the holster I've got something in front of the gun that I'm not willing to destroy and another thing you want to never do when you re host there I'm flagged you never want to come into the holster like this because it's raking right through right through my body same thing like this I see people hunting for their host and they got the muzzle toward them if I'm gonna go back to the holster I'm gonna error this way so should something happen it's not directed toward me I never want to have this muzzle pointed at anything I'm not willing to destroy so when you're out on the Reg you sound critical that is and you get bored or you get tired or whatever do not engage in any firearms activity go do something else because your minds not there all right that is preaching to you we're gonna go into the training part of it now we've got the iPad out it works on Apple or Android so I've got it set on draw and dry fire so I have to snap it for the for it to register we're going to go for consistency there just for technique and you can see the graph and you can start applying yourself to the graph you see that change any deficiencies that you see in your draw so okay we've got empty mag got an empty pistol if you're going to do this repeatedly you might want to put a snap cap in it I'm not going to do this but a few times and most of my submitting westerns have been very forgiving on dry fire so all right let's go ahead and do five of them right quick remember finger out of the trigger guard until the muzzle it's parallel to the ground all right standby standby standby standby no jumping one more standby okay we're lost back and you might notice I was still checking the chamber every time I racked it back that's old habits you know safety thing all right we'll come take a look at what we've done here and talk about actually if you do experience from first drawer to the last one give you an idea of what kind of Intel this little gadget here is actually producing the time for me to react from the timer and actually touch the pistol is recorded on the first set of data here under grip so if that like the last presentation it took me point 27 107 seconds grab the pistol and the get it horizontal to the ground was an additional 31 107 seconds at argot was a point 24 hundredths of a second more and then the final trigger prep an actual time on target to fire the shot was point 25 107 so what I'm looking at here on this graph is say let's go back to the grip here from the reaction time to react to Lombardo and actually grab the pistol in the host there the first one was a point 2,400 and then a 30 132 a 34 33 and a 27 so it gave me an average of 0.3 to react and grab the pistol to get it horizontal again okay on the first run it was a point forward at a point 3 to point 28 a point 30 point 28 and a point 3 one so my average on that was a point 31 hundredths of a second to get the gun horizontal to the ground and to get to the target from there give you an idea on the first presentation it was a 23 in a 27 or 28 25 27 so what you're looking at is the consistency of you going toward the target so this thing can analyze all your hand motions and it gives you an idea of where you might be sluggish and then you can work on those particular areas of the draw so the draw is not just whipping out of host there's actually four but four fundamentals of getting it from the holster to the target zone and then firing the shot and the actual shot time that it took me while I was on target to produce an aim shot from the very first was 24 hundredths at 31 24 24 and then when I'm ahead at 39 I saw the gun came in relatively quick at that time and then the 25 so the average was twenty eight hundredths of a second on target so this graphs and it also little total time first draw was a 11.11 1.15 1.2 1.09 1.15 so what I'm looking for there was just a good consistent run into the target and that's what you want to have when you when you go to a match you want consistency is gonna win today and you want to go right back to your training mode not necessarily your fastest runs but what's going to be the most consistent you don't want to show up at a match and give away a lot of ground or the first few stages when you're really nervous and then have rest of the day you're trying to catch back on lost ground very bad strategy to have so I'd rather start off a lot more consistent and then as you as your gun familiarity builds I'm on the range a few hours I'm getting accustomed to the trigger pulls on although my different guns specially the three gun then you can start picking up picking up speed and I always you're only shoot as fast as I see and this kind of gives you a lot of intent on what you are and how you progress it on your training so you can do all this indoors the course you go out with live fire and you can see where you're deficient maybe taking too much time out of the host of your reaction time to grab the gun in the holster that's where a lot of guys lose some time and the more you train you actually start to listen for the very start of the beep and not that last part of the beep you saw me there I was a little bit jumping I'm like an old racehorse when I see that gate I want to go and when I heard standby I was I was jumping already so you want to have that reflex too when you hear the very first thought of that beep not the last part is that think beeps for longer than what you think when you hear that slightest bit of noise of that beep going you should be in motion and both hands work together you get the gun up into the target to produce a good consistent grip execute a good trigger squeeze coming into the target and this kind of shows you where you are dry firing so the next mode would be check it out with live fire so there you have a guys that's the Manas x10 system we're going to put a link in the description box below on their products and where to obtain them I'm kind of excited to get on my long guns there's some issues with the shotgun and rifle coming into the target and follow-through that I want to do but it can also graph your muzzle movement in between shots and that's something I'm very much interested in and rapid fire a rifle and shotgun is what it what it's actually doing in between shots because the recoil hides a lot of that and I'm hoping I get some intel on that so there you have a guy's madness get some
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Channel: Jerry Miculek - Pro Shooter
Views: 535,963
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: Jerry, Miculek, speed, shooting, fast, quick, draw, reload, reloading, world, record, smith, wesson, ruger, colt, gun, guns, firearms, firearm, tactical, assault, ar15, ar, 15, ak47, m16, m4, rifle, shotgun, pistol, handgun
Id: lhBIdL3ngKs
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 11min 33sec (693 seconds)
Published: Tue Apr 21 2020
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