@tatervader502 I would be inclined to disagree... if he actually hit something. My dad shoots from a classic weaver stance kinda like that with his right leg way back with like 90% of his weight on it and leaned back and down into the stance... but he shoots 1inch groups out of .38 s&w mod10. I would suggest squaring your feet just a little bit more this will raise your left shoulder/drop right shoulder and could improve your accuracy.
@awsomeshot I use the weaver stance, and I prefer it over the isosceles. I was referring to the arch of his back.
At times, it looked like he kept leaning back. Common error with a lot of people. They need to get a little more aggressive in their stance, and lean into it. It gives you more balance, so if in a self defense situation, the attacker can't push you off your feet as easily. (Which is why I like the weaver form.)
@tatervader502 thats why he need to square his feet more. his right leg is too far behind his left. feet should be @like 11oclock and 4 oclock postions oriented to the target. what he is doing looks like a modified or competition weaver. It is how my dad shoots wheel guns for comp. we were trained to shoot from a balanced isocoles in the Air Force. with feet shoulder width and your strong leg slightly behind your weak. like I said his accuracy is poor tho he needs work lol
@martyapo yeah, he did everythign wrong. its either feet and shoulders in line with the target OR feet and shoulders square with the target... not some messed up combination of the two ( I was originally taught the first way )
Trigger squeeze is big factor too
docjekyll2002 1 month ago
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Check out my channel for some sweet dueling tree action ;)
Daytonaman675 1 year ago
These things are so much fun.
And the guy on the right needs to learn how to stand.
tatervader502 1 year ago 2
@tatervader502 I would be inclined to disagree... if he actually hit something. My dad shoots from a classic weaver stance kinda like that with his right leg way back with like 90% of his weight on it and leaned back and down into the stance... but he shoots 1inch groups out of .38 s&w mod10. I would suggest squaring your feet just a little bit more this will raise your left shoulder/drop right shoulder and could improve your accuracy.
awsomeshot 1 year ago
@awsomeshot I use the weaver stance, and I prefer it over the isosceles. I was referring to the arch of his back.
At times, it looked like he kept leaning back. Common error with a lot of people. They need to get a little more aggressive in their stance, and lean into it. It gives you more balance, so if in a self defense situation, the attacker can't push you off your feet as easily. (Which is why I like the weaver form.)
tatervader502 1 year ago
@tatervader502 thats why he need to square his feet more. his right leg is too far behind his left. feet should be @like 11oclock and 4 oclock postions oriented to the target. what he is doing looks like a modified or competition weaver. It is how my dad shoots wheel guns for comp. we were trained to shoot from a balanced isocoles in the Air Force. with feet shoulder width and your strong leg slightly behind your weak. like I said his accuracy is poor tho he needs work lol
awsomeshot 1 year ago
I like the vid. Are those huge rocks your backstock? Doesnt look safe to me.
VolunteerMinimum 1 year ago
Dude on the right has a horrible stance. I guess that's why he missed almost all of them.
martyapo 1 year ago 2
@martyapo yeah, he did everythign wrong. its either feet and shoulders in line with the target OR feet and shoulders square with the target... not some messed up combination of the two ( I was originally taught the first way )
RYDERkN 1 year ago