Eyecam 9mm Handgun shooting
Awesome skills !
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Comments
16 comments posted so far. Login to add a comment.
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2. tradewinds commented 10 years ago
Holy Crap!!! That was awesome. I can't even begin to describe how fast and accurate that guy is.
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4. sux2bu commented 10 years ago
Here is a video to show proper grip on your handgun.
The shooter in the above video used grip style number one.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iDnEkFSMRik&noredirect=1
The shooter in the above video used grip style number one.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iDnEkFSMRik&noredirect=1
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6. fixento2 commented 10 years ago
Extreme stupidity and poor gun safety, about midway he shoots at a target with people walking parallel to the range 15 feet from the target. Where is this range?
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7. msavio008 commented 10 years ago
#6 If I had to guess it's probably in one of the US states that the gun laws are almost non-existant
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10. Gondy10 commented 10 years ago
Looks too easy for him..
And this is the exact opposite: www.youtube.com/watch?v=nr2GeWiDrdY
And this is the exact opposite: www.youtube.com/watch?v=nr2GeWiDrdY
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11. roady commented 10 years ago
#6 might be being voted down because it is a fish eye lens and the side vision seems closer than it is. Seeing as these guys hit with 10 centimeter (or better) accuracy 10 meters might be a bit less scary. Gun laws have nothing to do with it, as gun fans don't like being hit by strays either.
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12. Gorf commented 10 years ago
Thanks, roady, but I'm still not convinced. Even if the lens has a 180 degree field of view, it puts the spectators forward of the gun (which is bad). He might be an expert shot, but are you saying an expert never makes a mistake?
Plus there appear to be plenty of opportunities for a ricochet.
Plus there appear to be plenty of opportunities for a ricochet.
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13. fixento2 commented 10 years ago
It's obvious that many have never been on a firing range before. I shoot about 1500 rounds of 45 1911 pistol a year on all different types of ranges. They don't make exceptions to basic safety rules even during combat training in the military and certainly not on civilian ranges. I don't care if Annie Oakley is shooting, the skill of the shooter has nothing, absolutely nothing to do with firing range safety. This is how the exception to the rule becomes someone being shot.
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14. roady commented 10 years ago
I can't (and won't) defend the course as being safe, I wasn't there. And anyway stuff does go wrong. And it can go just as wrong directly behind the shooter, if you want to consider the worst case scenario, so even 180 isn't enough. But then, in my country it is actually illegal to have full power BB guns.
But there are a couple of rules in this style of shooting (IPSC) that you may find interesting.
There is a official following the shooter watching his hands. The beep sound you heard is the timer he carries. That's one official per shooter, for the entire time he has the gun out of the holster.
If the guy were to have his finger inside the trigger guard and to point the gun off the targets, the guy will be disqualified. As in go home. And that is any targets, not just the one we are unhappy about.
If the gun were to be pointed loaded at the ground within 3 metres, same.
Point further around than 89 degrees, again, go home.
Finger inside the trigger when reloading, then go home. He would have been disqualified if it had been seen. No empty threat, I've seen it happen.
If you were to actually fire the gun as above, even more serious.
Your average gun range doesn't watch you like this.
So it is safer or not? Well, I have to go back to the fact that spectators don't like being shot.
But there are a couple of rules in this style of shooting (IPSC) that you may find interesting.
There is a official following the shooter watching his hands. The beep sound you heard is the timer he carries. That's one official per shooter, for the entire time he has the gun out of the holster.
If the guy were to have his finger inside the trigger guard and to point the gun off the targets, the guy will be disqualified. As in go home. And that is any targets, not just the one we are unhappy about.
If the gun were to be pointed loaded at the ground within 3 metres, same.
Point further around than 89 degrees, again, go home.
Finger inside the trigger when reloading, then go home. He would have been disqualified if it had been seen. No empty threat, I've seen it happen.
If you were to actually fire the gun as above, even more serious.
Your average gun range doesn't watch you like this.
So it is safer or not? Well, I have to go back to the fact that spectators don't like being shot.
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16. RandurSource commented 10 years ago
That's some serious aiming, nice camera view, gave me that wolfenstein/duke nuke 'm feeling
+19 1. Ravez commented 10 years ago