Posted: 1/26/2013 2:39:50 PM EDT
| This guy is WICKED and look how fast he cleared his malfunction! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7IEOtvupVnE |
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One upper.
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Quoted: Quoted: The trick is how you do it when you don't expect it. The transitions looked clean though. I think that is the ex SAS guy that used to be on Larry Vickers old show or that Pistol show with that Aaron guy.. He's very capable! Oh, I have no doubt that he is. The trick with this stuff is repetition. This way it is second nature when it really happens. |
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The trick is how you do it when you don't expect it. The transitions looked clean though. I think that is the ex SAS guy that used to be on Larry Vickers old show or that Pistol show with that Aaron guy.. He's very capable! Oh, I have no doubt that he is. The trick with this stuff is repetition. This way it is second nature when it really happens. That's all well and good until a guy runs his primary dry when shooting back at a PKM far away and transitions rather than servicing his primary. |
| Jason Falla of Redback 1. I believe he's ex-Australian SF. One parts I'm having trouble with, when he locks back the bolt, does anything come out of the chamber? I see 1 case fall out when he takes the mag out and shakes the gun. It's just that I've always been taught to strip and rip before locking the bolt back and I'm marveling at what I just saw. |
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Jason Falla of Redback 1. I believe he's ex-Australian SF. One parts I'm having trouble with, when he locks back the bolt, does anything come out of the chamber? I see 1 case fall out when he takes the mag out and shakes the gun. It's just that I've always been taught to strip and rip before locking the bolt back and I'm marveling at what I just saw. Real feedway stoppages can be more interesting to clear than the ones you set up on the square range. Assess, lock, strip, work and load is still good technique. |
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Shouldn't he have racked it first and then tried to fire again before locking the bolt back and stripping the mag? Not when recovering from a transition. When your primary doesn't fire and you go to your secondary you only assess and clear the malfunction as remedial action after you complete your work with your secondary. Even if you have no secondary or a sidearm is an inappropriate solution, a feedway stoppage requires a bit more attention than a type 1, 2 or 4 malfunction, which response better to immediate action drills. Of course, running an IAD on a type 3 will often clarify exactly what type of malfunction you have pretty quickly. |
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Shouldn't he have racked it first and then tried to fire again before locking the bolt back and stripping the mag? If you can identify that it's a doublefeed, racking and attempting to fire would be a huge waste of time. It sure would. It might even make things harder to fix. |
