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- Freepistol
- Posts: 773
- Joined: Sun Feb 10, 2008 5:52 pm
- Location: Berwick, PA
Ruslan, I didn't see the bending thing you were talking about in the video. I find it hard to believe people pay money to see such crappy movies.
I do understand what you mean when you speak of shooting with little effort. I have begun to experience that since I went to a rolling trigger and area aim.
If you choose to teach us more, I will be most grateful to listen. Thanks!
Ben
I do understand what you mean when you speak of shooting with little effort. I have begun to experience that since I went to a rolling trigger and area aim.
If you choose to teach us more, I will be most grateful to listen. Thanks!
Ben
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- Posts: 155
- Joined: Thu Sep 09, 2004 4:16 pm
- Location: Victoria, BC Canada
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- Posts: 155
- Joined: Thu Sep 09, 2004 4:16 pm
- Location: Victoria, BC Canada
nah, just aim off more.
I got the aiming off sorted, just havent quite mastered bending it back yet.
russ, I liked the mouse in the box better. easy to loose the drive.
I think it is important to learn to bend the shot in when you are not steady enough in precission, or in timed events where the perfect alignment cant be made in the required time, so you need to push it in.
I think it is bad to train to do it, but accept it is ok if it happens, just hold better next time.
when your mind is right, it will work the shots towards the middle, rather than away.
if you are not steady, it is quite noticable from behind the shooter is working the shots in.
as is it is noticable if the shooter is steady and they are pushing the shots outside their hold pattern when their mind is not right.
I got the aiming off sorted, just havent quite mastered bending it back yet.
russ, I liked the mouse in the box better. easy to loose the drive.
I think it is important to learn to bend the shot in when you are not steady enough in precission, or in timed events where the perfect alignment cant be made in the required time, so you need to push it in.
I think it is bad to train to do it, but accept it is ok if it happens, just hold better next time.
when your mind is right, it will work the shots towards the middle, rather than away.
if you are not steady, it is quite noticable from behind the shooter is working the shots in.
as is it is noticable if the shooter is steady and they are pushing the shots outside their hold pattern when their mind is not right.
there seems to be a degree of uncertainty in your statementWerner Heisenberg. wrote:No, no, it's just he didn't know where it was because he had just measured its velocityNiels Bohr wrote:I thought that the bullet's trajectory was bending due to the anti-gravitational forces emanating from Angelina Jolie's lips.
Spencer
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- Joined: Thu May 22, 2008 8:06 am
- Location: Auburn, AL
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- Posts: 155
- Joined: Thu Sep 09, 2004 4:16 pm
- Location: Victoria, BC Canada
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- Posts: 5617
- Joined: Mon Mar 01, 2004 12:49 pm
- Location: Ruislip, UK
At last, I now understand (for the first time) what this thread is all about.Anonymous wrote:Just to make this thread whole
It's Schroedinger's Cat
Post Subject
As a general rule, I have never payed much attention to the people I could consistantly out shoot. Russ , you are a different cat. Best wishes on all your shooting endevors including coaching. Good Shooting and Coaching Bill Horton
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- Posts: 444
- Joined: Thu May 22, 2008 8:06 am
- Location: Auburn, AL
So I'm working with some talented juniors; bright kids (as you will see) and "full of fun."
We're at this match, and chit-chatting prior to prep period. The fine young adults (sorry, I called them "kids" earlier- THEY DON'T LIKE THAT!) range in ages from 14ish-19ish.
Of course the whole area aiming thing comes up as I am giving them their "focus on fundamentals" pep talk. So naturally the whole thought process of accepting your apparent hold etc. comes up . . . somehow I make some comment about *knowing* when you break the shot ("trust the process") that it is going to be a ten vs. *thinking* (trying to line up two sights a fuzzy blob) that you can make it a ten ("bending the shot?").
This 14 year old kid sez:
"Tryign to shoot a ten would be like trying to read a pop-up book on Schroedinger's cat."
PRICELESS!!!!!
I was still laughing when the match clock started . . .
(p.s. the kid was reading Hegel's "Phenomenology of Spirit" in a well-thumbed paperback to relax . . . I shoulda known!)
We're at this match, and chit-chatting prior to prep period. The fine young adults (sorry, I called them "kids" earlier- THEY DON'T LIKE THAT!) range in ages from 14ish-19ish.
Of course the whole area aiming thing comes up as I am giving them their "focus on fundamentals" pep talk. So naturally the whole thought process of accepting your apparent hold etc. comes up . . . somehow I make some comment about *knowing* when you break the shot ("trust the process") that it is going to be a ten vs. *thinking* (trying to line up two sights a fuzzy blob) that you can make it a ten ("bending the shot?").
This 14 year old kid sez:
"Tryign to shoot a ten would be like trying to read a pop-up book on Schroedinger's cat."
PRICELESS!!!!!
I was still laughing when the match clock started . . .
(p.s. the kid was reading Hegel's "Phenomenology of Spirit" in a well-thumbed paperback to relax . . . I shoulda known!)
Bending grenade launcher
if that guy could shoot a grenade at Angi and have it bend then blow up, that would be cool.