Posted on 01/29/2020 8:40:28 AM PST by Black_Rifle_Gunsmith
Commanding your Second Amendment rights appropriately means knowing how to defend yourself with responsibility and confidence. That means using lethal force, if necessary. After all, your goal is to remain safe and protect yourself and your property. But stocking up on ammo and guns isnt enough. You need to know how to shoot, and shoot well under stress. If the time ever comes, pulling the trigger will require no hesitation and a lot of confidence. You need to build your shooting skills into your muscle memory.
You should practice defensive shooting drills consistently. This quick guide will teach you how to shoot more confidently and effectively with handgun drills. Let's first review drills that focus on improving your stance and quick-draw, followed by your grip, sight picture, and aim. These pistol drills will get you confident behind the trigger when speed counts. Then let's look at drills that teach you how to master malfunctions and clear jams. This guide will also review some drills you can practice with long rifles. This will ensure youre capable of reacting to a threat and retaining the upper hand, even if your rifle or pistol doesnt want to cooperate.
To make defensive shooting drills more beneficial, follow these best practices:
1. The Quick-Draw Drill
Defensive shooting means reacting to and dispatching the threat quickly. If youre facing an attacker, there wont be time to draw your weapon and consider the situation. The quick-draw drill is exactly what it sounds like: Practicing how to quickly draw your weapon and get a bead on the threat in front of you. This is the meat and potatoes of all pistol shooting drills. If you can master the quick draw and an appropriate sight picture, youve covered the basics.
Play with holster placement. It's important to cover this first because this drill also teaches you how to configure your holster and troubleshoot your setup. Depending on your build and holster type (inside or outside the waistband), you may find that shifting from a 3 o clock position (pictured above) to a 4 or 6 o clock position (dependent on your left- or right-handedness) makes drawing easier.
This is especially true if youre rocking an IWB holster. Your holster position should allow you to grip your handgun with at least three fingers. It should also prevent you from having to excessively bend your arm or twist. You should be able to keep both feet planted in a shooting stance with your eyes, face, and body directly on target while you draw. Play around with holster position while you perform this drill if you find drawing quickly is difficult.
Practicing the Drill:
First, assume a shooting stance. Ensure both feet are planted firmly. You should be directly facing your target. Your feet should be shoulder-width apart. Work on your grab. With your shooting stance assumed, practice pulling your weapon from its holster. Get a feel for the movement. Is it natural? Can you keep eyes on target and feet planted? Can you get your grip high on the guns backstrap? Make adjustments to holster position as needed. Practice drawing. Next, get comfortable with pulling your weapon up to the high-ready. As soon as your gun clears the holster, work on rotating the muzzle toward the target while you bring it up. Practice your grip. While moving the muzzle on target, have your offhand meet your weapon and main hand directly in front of your chest, pushing out and extending your arms toward the target. At this point, you should be practicing the appropriate grip:
2. The Mozambique Drill
Now that you know how to quick-draw and meet your target, its time to practice what you should do when the threat in question is coming hard and fast. Usually, a single round or gut shot wont do the trick. You need to practice shot placement so you can ensure each round on target works to quickly bring down the threat. Were talking about the Mozambique Drill, commonly known as the Failure to Stop Drill. Build this drill into your Quick-Draw practice. Ideally, you should be practicing the Mozambique Drill while youre running through your quick-draw drill. The Mozambique Drill (also called the Failure to Stop Drill) is incredibly simple:
3. Clearing Jams Drill
You can call this the Oh, crap Drill, and its critically important you practice. Anyone can get good at anything when conditions are right. Real skill comes in fixing malfunctions and deficiencies and achieving the same standard. This philosophy applies to defensive shooting. With this drill, were practicing how to clear a jam or weapon malfunction so we can get back into the fight quickly in a matter of seconds, at most. You can practice this drill with handguns and semiautomatic rifles like the AR-15. Setting up this drill requires the use of a snap cap (an inert round), or a spent shell casing. Using either option, were simulating a round that got stuck feeding, a dead primer, and a stovepipe.
All these common malfunctions can be fixed with this drill:
Summary & Tips
Practicing the quick-draw drill will make you more confident with your handgun. Itll teach you how to react to threats and draw your weapon quickly. The Mozambique Drill will improve your ability to quickly acquire a target and put rounds where theyre most lethal. Practicing clearing jams is critically important, too you cant always count on your weapon working 100% of the time. Remember the Four Rules of firearm safety:
Soon to be illegal in Virginia.......
One suggestion, with the caveat that I agree with 95% of your post: If we’re “training like we fight”, shouldn’t there be the occasional drill WITHOUT ear protection? The fog of war/personal protection includes the noise and fury of responding to live, loud weapons fire. Should there be a balance between safety and realism?
Colonel, USAF (ret)
Respectfully, I disagree. I wouldn’t risk blowing my ear drums out at the range, ever. Especially considering it’s going to ruin my auditory situational awareness if it’s ever needed. — Fires NCO/JFO, ret. (with Tinnitus)
Defensive shooting = dead meat
Ditto the tinnitus here, BRG. Just seems as though disorientation could be reduced if one had been in that situation even once before.
I realize its impossible to discuss and transfer all the knowledge of the technique of safely drawing from a holster in one short article, much less the other matters you cover. But I really think you should emphasize the practice of what you do with your support hand during the draw so as not to muzzle yourself while drawing or returning the gun to the holster, and muzzle awareness throughout so as not to muzzle anyone who is not the threat while drawing.
Other than that, good post. :)
Colonel, USAF (ret)
No, sir, never train without proper hearing and eye protection.
We also don't perform the occasional drill of standing downrange and having gunfire whizzing past us, just to orient ourselves to the feeling of being under fire.
The training benefits do not outweigh the safety risks.
I carry everywhere I legally can. I have just recently begun to where the miniature electronic protectors, not everywhere yet, but when I am at the range or when I volunteer for church security. I may decide at some point to just wear them all the time. Haven't made that decision yet as they are low profile but not invisible.
Or you could learn some sign language.
I find it works well at the range with my son, who also knows it.
These days, someone is likely to think they are hearing aids.
Thats kind of what I am afraid of. Dont like to admit how old I am getting. LOL
I only have 5 or 6 shots before I need to speed re-load or switch weapons, but that could be very iffy, so I better be accurate.
I practice at 15' to 25' because in my house that will work, and on the street {mall, wherever} out side of 25', unless I'm being shot at, the perp {s} are not a real threat.
Since these events are not a game, you better put both a lot of thought and practice into different situations.
Carrying a weapon, without constant practice and situational awareness, and the will to use it, is just extra weight to be lugging around.
Good idea.
BRG,,
.
Good Stuff,
Thanks!
Thanks Good info. “Practice, practice, practice.” - Simo Hayha
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fvCrE5NCsts
First, insure that you can repeatedly hit small targets at reasonable ranges slow fire: if one cannot call and place precise fire on point targets, running and gunning at B27 size cutouts is perhaps fun, but not too productive.
Dry fire and slow fire ought to be be exercises in everyone’s repertoire, in my personal opinion.
How much ammo do you carry for real? Train to conserve that while neutralizing every target reasonably expected. Seek cover,move off line, and primarily use your greatest weapon and asset, your mind to avoid
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