Yes, You Do Have to Aim a Shotgun

 

You Have to Aim Shotguns
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Besides butchering rabbits on YouTube, I am a killer of sacred cows. One thing I hate is to hear a mall ninja prattle on about how he loves him some shotgun.  They love to say that all he has to do is point down the hall and kill anything coming down it.

I hate to tell you, just because it’s a shotgun doesn’t mean you don’t have to aim it…

Let me break it to you… You have to aim shotguns

I was first exposed to the following concept of spread by listening to Massad Ayoob talk about “rule of six”.  Try as I might I cannot find that link or I would add it here.  However, what I did find were several forensic studies talking about shotgun spread over distance. While I am not going to reproduce it her, I will invite you to look at this Google scanned book The use of statistics in Forensics  to read for yourself the math that goes into what I am telling you.

I have to apologize in advance for the video that supports this article. I choose 7 ¾ shot for the exercise because it gives a better overall view of spread than buckshot – more pellets give more data, but the small holes did not show up as well as I would have liked on camera – a fact I did not notice until I was editing the video – it showed up well on the butcher paper at the range. Also wind was barely noticeable on the range, but it made an unspeakable roar on the camera – once again not noticed until I was editing.

We Show Spread at Different Ranges

Here is what we did, we fired a 12 gauge shotgun at approximately 6, 12, and 18 feet from an 18.5 inch improved cylinder choked 12 gauge Remington 870 to demonstrate the concept of shot spread.

As the shot leaves the bore it exits the muzzle in a concentrated mass – wadding included – so at around 6 feet the shot impacts on the target much like a slug. The result is that the shot and wadding mass will produce a single large hole in a target. If the target is a living being, the wadding material will be blown into the wound tract with the pellets.

At distances more than about 10 feet the shot mass starts to break apart – you will get individual pellet holes (called flyers) around the edges and you will see a wadding hole on a paper target. If the target is a person, the wadding may or may not enter the wound. A little farther and the wad will take on more of a different trajectory as it gives up its energy sooner because of its lighter weight, and may leave a bruise until about 15 feet. The wad will fall to the ground after about 20 feet.

As you move farther the pellets will spread farther apart so that at 12 feet you start to see individual pellet holes, and by 18 feet you see a large spread that covers a B-6 target.

Pick the Best Tool for the Job

With a shotgun you have to make trades, rounds are much heavier than pistol or center-fire ammunition, and while a shotgun leaves a devastating wound at close range – shot loses energy very quickly because of light weight and at 30 feet of so may make a very ugly and bloody would, it may not incapacitate what you are shooting at.

What I would suggest to you if you plan on using a shotgun for home or other personal defense, is that you measure the distance you think you may be called upon to fire.  Then, go to the range, and set up a witness board.  Turkey hunters call them pattern boards.  Shoot and see what your shotgun can do at the range you plan on employing it.

Butcher paper stapled to a target frame works well for seeing the spread of the rounds.  However, it may not show you penetrative power. I would suggest you use some Sheetrock at the farther distances to get a better indication of the terminal energy of shot.

Conclusion

Finally, you also need to be aware shot patterns can be affected by the load, pellet size, wad type, and choke of the shotgun. That’s why I keep saying approximate.  Your shotgun may not perform exactly like mine.  Regardless of brand, barrel, ammunition, or skill – you have to aim shotguns if you want to hit anything.

Handgun Carry Permit Scenario #4

Handgun Carry Permit Scenario #4 Car Theft

 

Handgun Scenario #4
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This video is a clip from the old TN handgun permit video, it is being used under the fair use doctrine.

This video will show a brief encounter that a legally armed citizen will face.

Please watch the handgun scenario and then think about what you would do in this situation.

An armed citizen generally has an extremely compressed window in a use of force situation. If you have not spent some time seriously considering what would cause you to use force and the implications (Physical, Legal, Moral, Psychological, and Sociological) then you are setting yourself up for failure.

Consider your gut reaction and what you immediately think you should do. Then think about the implications of those actions and see if it changes your mind on what you should do.

Answer these two questions:

  • Would I have taken same action as the armed citizen in the video?
  • If I had, would it have been legal?

Tomorrow we will discuss the “legal” response…

I think this kind of what would you do training is invaluable to preparing a person to carry a gun for self defense.  If you never work on handgun scenario training you will have to work through the situation when it occurs – this will waste precious seconds and may cause you to do the wrong thing.  Please look at the post on OODA loop for more information.

On the Next Page We Have the Discussion

Ayoob Tips When Stopped by Police When Carrying a Weapon

Ayoob Tips When Stopped by Police When Carrying a Weapon

 

Ayoob Tips When Stopped by Police When Carrying a Weapon
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According to Wikipedia Massad Ayoob is an internationally known firearms and self-defense instructor. He has taught police techniques and civilian self-defense to both law enforcement officers and private citizens since 1974.

He was the director of the Lethal Force Institute (LFI) in Concord, New Hampshire from 1981 to 2009.  Ayoob now directs the Massad Ayoob Group (MAG).

More than that bio Mr. Ayoob writes some of the best firearm books on the subject of the legal aftermath of a self defense shooting.  I widely quote his work in my classes,  and recommend his books courses and videos to my students.

I have always taught that while knowing how to gunfight is vital if your going to carry a gun, you are MUCH more likely to have to deal with a policeman while going armed than getting in a gunfight with a criminal.

I like how Ayoob approaches the subject as he gives tips when stopped by police when carrying a weapon.

One thing I feel the State of Tennessee dropped the ball on when updating the Handgun Carry Permit was they took out scenario training videos like this one and replaced it with Troopers talking about drugs.

Lets face it Armed Citizenry that apply for a state permit are not likely to smoke meth, but they should know how to act when confronted by police officers while carrying their weapons.

These Tips When Stopped by Police is very good information and I hope you find it useful

CETME Reliability – Firing Without an Extractor

 

CETME Reliability - Firing Without an Extractor
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So I traded a .45 1911 for a CETME – and while CETME’s built by century arms have a terrible track record, I did not mind because the pistol was a remnant from my divorce and USED to be part of a matched set that my ex demanded be divided.

I have more than one pistol, but not more than one .308, and I wanted to get a CETME to play with. You see from what I have heard every CETME owner eventually either gives up of becomes a CETME gunsmith, and once tuned they are really good battle rifles.

One of the reasons these rifles are so reliable (and every defensive gun is judged by a standard of 100% reliability IMHO) is because of its delayed roller blowback system. This is funny because the DRB system is the cause of most of the complaints about the rifle (other than the drunken sledge hammer toting monkeys that like to weld guns together without ensuring the sights are aligned over at CAI). The flutes machined in the chamber help blow the fired brass back out of the gun. To demonstrate this I have actually removed the extractor from my CETME and tried firing without and extractor. The rifle functions and extracts the brass. It does not throw the rounds as far or as hard as it did with the extractor installed, and it stovepipes pretty often, but it is a simple matter to sweep the stovepipe round out and recharge the gun to fire it as a single shot.

I really didn’t have a reason to do this other than I wanted to build a little confidence in my gun and explore its capabilities. It’s funny, but the big difference I saw in reliability was not from firing with or without the extractor, but from good magazines versus beat up magazines. That is something to remember when some knucklehead recommends using the magazine feed lips to pry out the pins holding the gun together. I know it might be in an old army manual somewhere, but not only do I have an old military manual that recommends standing in a field shoulder to shoulder with your buddies waiting your turn to shoot back at them, they also had the benefit of a military supply chain to replace magazines as they got damaged.

 

While I do not like the CETME beating up on my brass, I love the reliability, the concept of a CETME Firing Without an Extractor is pretty cool and speaks to the design.