Never heard that minute term beforeMinute of man! Gotta like that!
Or as we always say, inside Shoulder blades!
Glad you like it.
It is a play on words vs the MOA minute of angle which is the gold standard for rifle accuracy. As a Marine we were a bit less concerned about a sub one, basically multiple shots inside one square inch at 100 yards. Not to say it is not important but for door kickers we just wanted to be inside shoulder blades, thus minute of man. Just another example of the dark humor men/women in uniform revert to.Never heard that minute term before
But it sure is a fun gun
(I understand why my boy wanted one)
Long day of training today, had guests in helicopter engaging targets. Lots of fun!
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All gas today no bolts. Beginners only today. No where near ready for night shooting. It takes almost a full day of just teaching them how to get in and out safely prior to trying it at night. many dry runs in the daylight. It is eye opening for folks as to @WV64Signet point it is not nearly as easy as TV makes it look. and it is a perishable skill!Aerial platform shooting is an aquired skill, especially in low light. At least precision... Gas gun preferred. I've tried a bolt gun and it sucks
All gas today no bolts. Beginners only today. No where near ready for night shooting. It takes almost a full day of just teaching them how to get in and out safely prior to trying it at night. many dry runs in the daylight. It is eye opening for folks as to @WV64Signet point it is not nearly as easy as TV makes it look. and it is a perishable skill!
I sucked then, I suck now. It is an art form.I think most people underestimate the round count requirement for (what I understand, to be) proficiency.
I used to burn more than 1000 rounds a week and I wasn't "good"
Day three, it is always a challenge to train school administrators and educators in self defense. During AAR yesterday I asked what was your biggest takeaway from the day, almost in unison the ladies said they are coming back today with some trimmed fingernails. Not exactly the feedback I was looking for but it is legit! By end of day almost all of them both men and women had bandaids here or there on their hands. Not from injury or slide bite but because the pistol was roughly textured where it met their skin. Several of them had never held a pistol in their life before. By the end of the day they are drawing from holster, clearing malfunctions, moving laterally and doing reloads without looking at the pistol. It is very cool watching the students evolve and learn. The transformation is dramatic. Neat to be a part of it. They each shot aprox 500 rounds yesterday.
In our attempt to be more kind and gentle instructors we all carry several mag loaders in our range bags and let them use them. Amazing how many come up missing at end of week. We spray paint them garishly in an attempt to retain them.Loading mags... that'll chew fingers
In our attempt to be more kind and gentle instructors we all carry several mag loaders in our range bags and let them use them. Amazing how many come up missing at end of week. We spray paint them garishly in an attempt to retain them.
To no avail
Nope, let me look at information.Has anyone in this thread had any experience with the .22 ARC?
It does, it certainly has piqued my interest.I literally almost posted this same question a few days ago! It looks good!
The 2 small rifle calibers I do eventually plan on owning are .17 HMR and .224 Valkyrie. But this looks interesting!Has anyone in this thread had any experience with the .22 ARC?