1. The physics of the gun require the frame to be as still as possible relative to the motion of the slide for proper operation and reliability.
2. The anatomy of the human wrist/arm/elbow/shoulder dictate that any bending is going to change the alignment of the gun, which increases the amount of time to be able to fire another shot or, eventually, allows the gun to drift off target.
Thats excatly what happends when I draw. My body's center of gravity drops. It puts me in a very natuarl shooting position.
I also tried having one arm bent when shooting, almost like a Weaver stance and I was not nearly as good with it as i was with body arms locked out.
kflo01 1 week ago
No, rdean... definitely not.
There are a bunch of reasons... here are a few:
1. The physics of the gun require the frame to be as still as possible relative to the motion of the slide for proper operation and reliability.
2. The anatomy of the human wrist/arm/elbow/shoulder dictate that any bending is going to change the alignment of the gun, which increases the amount of time to be able to fire another shot or, eventually, allows the gun to drift off target.
3.Extension is more consistent.
RobPincus 5 months ago
Rob wouldnt u want your arms slightly bent to absorb recoil? Ive heard different things as fsr as different methods?
rdean45acp 5 months ago
FIRST
fishfrizbee 7 months ago