2014 NRA Action Pistol World Championship Recap

As I sit and write this, I’m currently attending the 2014 Bianchi Cup. For those not familiar, the Bianchi Cup is technically the American national championship for the shooting discipline of NRA Action Pistol. Every two years, NRA AP holds a world championship match. Previous matches have been held in Australia and Germany, and 2014 it was the USA’s turn. The venue selected was the famous Rockcastle Shooting Center in Kentucky, just a short drive north of Bowling Green.

It’s impossible to have a discussion on a match at Rockcastle without mentioning the amazing area it’s in. The Park Mammoth resort in Kentucky offers everything, not just shooting. Hiking, caving, even golf can be had there. As mentioned it’s also a short drive from the Corvette Museum, a must-see for any proper petrolsexual. On site there’s a hotel, a pretty awesome restaurant, and of course the shooting facilities.

Well, unless you’re shooting an NRA AP match. Due to limitations of the range, only two of the four classic AP stages were set up on Rockcastle proper. The Mover and the Plates were on the resort property, and the Barricade and Practical were set up at…another facility. Which was also good, but it was a solid 15-20 minute drive from Rockcastle itself, and if you’re a city boy the roads you had to take to get there were adventurous, to put it mildly.

That sort of set the tune for this match. The match itself was an uneven experience. The stages, despite complaints were mostly fine. While they certainly weren’t up to the standards set by the Bianchi Cup, there were more than adequate. So, stages: good. The match staff themselves were courteous, professional, and squared away. Everything I’d expect from a facility as well regarded as Rockcastle.

However, it wasn’t all great. See, there were problems, and those problems were the scoring. That was, for lack of a better word, an absolute clown show. At 6pm on Saturday, the awards dinner “began.” At 9:30 pm, the scores were actually finished being calculated, and trophies were handed out. At 10:30, I left because I had literally no patience to wait while they recalculated the aggregate score.

I have a lot of respect for the team at Rockcastle. They have an amazing facility, and they put on literally the best 3-Gun matches in the country. But the way the scoring was handled at the NRA AP World Championship was disappointing, to say the least.

Now, let’s move on to my performance. I’ll cut to the chase: I shot better than I thought I would, and worse than I could have. I finished with a decent 1717, good enough for a 10th place finish in Production. My first top 10 of the year means I’ll be donating some money to charity. However, I dropped 7 plates on the Falling Plates, and left a lot of points on the board on the Practical as well. So, I’m happy that I broke 1700 in a main match, but I definitely could have shot a bit better.

Until the World Championship, my best main match score had been a 1698 in 2012. Yes, I had shot a 1750+ in 2012, but that was in the Agg so it doesn’t count for a main match score. This year I’m in no danger of reaching that Agg score anyway, after a dismal Barricades and worse Plates. But at Rockcastle, I shot a PR, and that felt good.

It just didn’t feel as good as it could have. I was super relaxed, shot pretty decently, but there was something missing. It was a feeling of meaningfulness from the match itself. I feel like I shot my best score at a large club match, not a world championship. National level matches, world level matches should feel special. The Bianchi Cup feels special each year. It feels important. Steel Challenge used to, and maybe someday it will again.

The World Championship was missing that feel, and regardless of anything else, if a match doesn’t feel special, it won’t be.

How to help your man buy his first gun

Nationally recognized competitors such as Dave Sevigny make great role models, and are a good reminder to us all that MEN SHOOT TOO!
Nationally-recognized competitors such as Dave Sevigny make great role models, and are a good reminder to us all that MEN SHOOT TOO!

It’s finally happened. Your husband/boyfriend/life partner finally agreed to come to the range with you and try their hand at shooting, and they loved it! Now they want to know what gun to buy. How can you help him through the process of selecting his first handgun, without all the information becoming too intimidating?Continue reading →

Review: CZ 712 Practical for 3 Gun (Part II)

20140518-181637.jpgIn my post on Wednesday we covered the following parts of the CZ 712 Practical, (6) Loader, carrier button, (5) safety, (7) bolt release, (8) bolt handle, (10) mag tube extension and follower. Some, I felt, were excellent for an entry level shotgun such as this one, other features, I said, needed minimal tweaking to bring them to a level that would benefit the beginning 3 gunner. We’ll get to the DIY opportunities that the 712 Practical offers, but first, we must discuss a few major (and a couple minor) features of the gun.
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A Girl and A Gun Women’s Shooting League – Sioux Falls

agag_sitelogoWhile I’ve known Julianna Crowder for a while, my first real exposure to the A Girl & A Gun Women’s Shooting League was at their National Conference this past March down in Waco, Texas. It was a wonderful experience; the classes and instructors they had were all top notch, and I couldn’t believe how many women were there enjoying themselves and learning a lot along the way. Continue reading →

Emotional attachments

I don’t really get attached to guns. Sure, the guns my dad has given me for presents, the 10,000 round Colt; I’m attached to those. But for the most part, I get about as emotional about guns as I get about baseball bats. Obviously, not all shooters feel the same way, and some feel quite strongly about guns. I imagine if I had a 25,000 Italian over/under shotgun I might be a bit more emotionally attached to that. But you know what I do get attached to? Cars.

Fozzie

That’s my Subaru Forester. It is the third car I ever owned, and the 2nd car I bought with my own money. It followed a 1994 Mitsubishi Mighty Max pickup truck and a 1998 Ford Explorer Sport, all of which gave great service. I shed a single, manly tear when I traded in the Explorer for that car, and that’s okay because trading in a car that’s carried you for 150,000 miles is a perfectly manly reason to shed a single tear. That’s what really gets to me about cars – all our lives are just a journey from the point of our birth to the point of our death, and for so many of us our cars are linked to that journey. My Explorer carried me around during college, back and forth to Virginia, then back to Indiana where I eventually bought the Subaru. The Fozzie drove me to work, on vacation, to my first Bianchi Cup. It carried me and all my earthly belongings when I left Indiana to move to Washington. I met my wife in Washington, and she drove the Subaru for a time; when it was finally time to move to Sioux Falls, what car did I ship across the country? Not my Charger, no it was my loyal little donkey, the Fozzie.

Even today, 95,000 miles and 7 years later, it’s great to drive. It was never the fastest car, or the best handling, but you can’t drive it on a dirt road without feeling like the car is saying to you, “Let’s go faster! I am a rally car, I really am!” There is a plucky, undeniably joyful spirit that this car carries.

If you’re wondering what the point of this post is, well to be honest there isn’t one. Some people get attached to guns. I get attached to cars. If you’d like to share a story about your favorite gun, a car you loved, or something that you carried that you’d swear has a personality, please feel free to do so in the comments.

Budget Self Defense Choices

The other day I was at a local gunstore with a friend and he asked me an interesting question: If somebody came to you with a very small budget for home defense or self defense and they had to buy what’s sitting on the store shelf right now, what would you set them up with? It’s a trickier question than it may seem on the surface. We need selections that are cheap, reliable, and effective. As the old joke goes, you can typically pick any two items from that list.

Looking around the store briefly I came to a recommendation for a handgun suitable for home defense and/or concealed carry, and a long gun suitable for home defense.

The Handgun:

If you shop carefully you can sometimes find a real bargain on used handguns, but in the typical gunstore they’re often priced higher than my buy-it-now threshold. Guns are durable goods that tend to hold their value pretty well, assuming they aren’t rusted or obviously worn out. The used section of the shelf is where I look first when I go into a store just in case there’s a deal to be had. Every now and then you get lucky. Last year I found a pristine 6″ S&W model 28 for under $500 and I snatched it right up. That’s an atypical result, at least for me. Some stores put guns up on consignment based on what the individual selling the gun is trying to get from it. Sometimes the store takes in trades which, if done correctly, can net the store a nice margin on the total deal. Since everybody thinks their gun is worth top dollar and gun stores often operate on pretty thin margins anyway, the negotiating room for used guns can be narrow to non-existent. While I’d love to suggest buying used as a means of buying a serviceable firearm on a budget, it’s not something you can absolutely depend on. If you can find a bargain, by all means take advantage…just don’t go into things expecting a miracle.

The budget semi-auto in S&W's lineup seems like the best bet in its pricerange...
The budget semi-auto in S&W’s lineup seems like the best bet in its pricerange…

As a result, for the hypothetical choice I recommended a new gun: The S&W SD9 VE. No, it’s not the sexiest handgun on the shelf and yes, it is a descendent of the S&W Sigma, but it has benefitted from considerable improvement and refinement over the Sigma. The specimens I’ve encountered worked well enough and could be used to hit a reasonable target by just about anyone with a little bit of practice. Generally speaking S&W’s customer service is good, (just in case there’s a problem with a pistol) and at the time I was looking in the store the SD9 VE was one of the least expensive guns on the shelf, selling for a little over $300.00. At that price point they’re tough to beat. I’d buy one in a heartbeat over anything offered by, say, Taurus.

Close second would be the Ruger SP101 I saw on the shelf for just a bit over $400. Limited capacity, certainly, but a very good revolver that you could count on to work.

I would also add that if somebody could only afford one gun, I’d stick with a handgun because it can work for home defense and for daily carry. Being able to defend against home invasions is certainly useful, but bad guys have been known to accost innocent people outside the home too…so having something you can keep on your person is crucial if you’re stuck with only one firearm in total.

The Long Gun:

This is where I get a little controversial: Given the mission of home defense for a long gun and trying to effectively accomplish that mission for as little money as possible, I’d suggest a Ruger 10/22. A .22 rimfire is not an ideal weapon to use against bad guys. It exhibits rather poor terminal ballistics even from a rifle…but when fired from a rifle you can be incredibly precise with one at typical home defense distances. Ruger now makes a reliable 25 round magazine for their rifles and every Ruger 25 round magazine I’ve bought or encountered in the wild has worked. The 10/22 doesn’t seem to be picky about feeding ammunition, and the aftermarket for the rifle is so huge that one should be able to very cheaply add necessary add-ons like a light, sling, and a red dot scope without breaking the bank. Assuming you can find .22LR ammo, it’s something you can practice with on the cheap.

Adding accessories and doing some practice on the range won’t magically transform the .22LR round. It’s still a .22…but somebody who knows how to put those little rounds on target effectively and who has another couple of dozen of them on tap before they need to reload is going to be a bigger problem than most bad guys can handle. It wouldn’t be my first choice for home defense, but if I had to rely on my Ruger 10/22 exclusively for home defense tomorrow I wouldn’t lose any sleep. I’m not the world’s greatest rifle shot, but I’m good enough with my 10/22 to put those little bullets inside the head box of an IDPA target pretty quickly at home defense ranges.

I know, I know…the default recommendation is a 12 gauge shotgun, preferably a pump-action one. Because shotgun, because they’re so powerful they’ll actually vaporize a bad guy in his tracks…maybe even travelling through time and killing that guy’s ancestors so that he’s never born in the first place, and because merely working the action of the shotgun is so terrifying that anyone within a 3 mile radius of the event will immediately lose control of their bowels.

It’s certainly a more effective weapon from a terminal ballistics perspective, but they also kick like a mule, tend to be pretty heavy, and people don’t tend to practice with them. A person who trains with a 10/22 (because they’re so easy to use and fun to shoot) is going to be far better off than a person who doesn’t practice with the 870 they’ve got sitting in a closet. I’m not arguing that the 10/22 is a better weapon against bad guys, merely that the cash-strapped person interested in a long gun that’s good enough for their purposes is probably better off with a gun they’ll train with and can use well than one they don’t train with.

Those are my budget suggestions for self defense. Yours may be different…if so, let me know what you’d suggest in the comments below.

The 5 best cartridges for CCW

There are so many different cartridges on the market, it’s not uncommon for new shooters to end up with decision paralysis when trying to figure out what their new defensive cartridge should be. There are lots of choices, from tiny mousegun calibers like the .25 ACP all the way up to ridiculous wildcat cartridges and boutique magnum rounds. But what’s the best? Here are our top 5 choices.

5. .40 S&W
The .40 S&W smashed on to the gunscene in the early 1990s as a replacement for the FBI’s downloaded 10mm cartridge. Once the FBI adopted it, it became one of the most popular cartridges for law enforcement use on the market, and the Glock 22 became one of the most common handguns in the world. The .40 S&W is a cartridge of compromise, however. It offers no ballistic advantage over a .45 ACP, and no capacity advantage over a 9mm. With modern JHP rounds, it doesn’t even offer a terminal ballistics advantage over the 9mm. It makes this list simply because it is so common that even during the ammo crisis it was easy to find .40 S&W at a reasonable price.

40SW

4. .380 ACP
Here we have the King of the Mouseguns. While I tend to actually prefer a .32 over the .380, there is no arguing that the explosion in popularity of small, pocketable .380 carry guns has led to a simultaneous ballistic revolution for the .380 cartridge. DoubleTap, Hornady, CorBon, and many others are now making rounds for the .380 that provide a decent combination of penetration and expansion. While it’s not a proper service cartridge and won’t meet FBI standards, it certainly meets the first rule of a gunfight: have a gun.

380 acp

3. .38 Special +P
The .38 Special +P is the Jack of all Trades of defensive pistol cartridges. If you want a light shooting round that won’t bother the recoil sensitive, you can get this. If you want a heavy shooting hardcast bullet that will shoot clean through a deer, you can get that too. There are jillions of wheelguns on the market that are chambered for or can accept .38 Special rounds, and it is still one of the most popular self defense rounds ever. There are entire graveyards full of guys that have been killed with .38, and you won’t go wrong if you opt for this as your primary self defense round.

38_Special_mushrooming_side_view

2. .45 ACP
While the phrase “they all fall to hardball” is total bullshit, the .45 ACP makes the list in the number 2 spot for a number of reasons. If you absolutely must have a defensive pistol cartridge that starts with the number “4” than .45 ACP is for you. While it doesn’t have the capacity of .40 S&W, it is generally regarded as more pleasant to shoot than .40. I’d agree with that assessment, and add another reason for it to hit the list in the #2 spot: if you carry a 1911, this is basically your default cartridge. It works better with the 1911 platform than any other round, and when using 7 round magazines with careful bullet selection is generally reliable in that platform.

45s

1. 9mm Luger
You’re the best around nothing’s gonna ever keep you down /karate kid
In all seriousness, the 9mm has been putting people in the dirt longer than .45 ACP (even if not by much). In the modern era of ballistic goodness, it offers the same terminal ballistic performance you get from the .40 or the .45 ACP, as its service loadings will all meet the FBI standards. But you get that terminal performance with roughly double the capacity of a .45 ACP, and its much easier to shoot well than a .40 S&W. In the last four years, pocket pistols in 9mm have taken off, with every major brand (except for one) producing a single stack, slim framed pistol in 9mm for concealed carry. Its very popularity is why it was hard to find during the ammo crisis. However, with the perfect butter zone combination of capacity, shootability, and terminal performance, the 9mm is definitely king of the hill for CCW cartridges.

9mm nato ball

The best cartridge is the one that’s loaded in the gun you’re carrying when you really need it. Like every says, having a gun is the most important thing. Knowing how to use it well is second, and third is having it loaded with one of the rounds on this list. It’s important, but not as important as some people think.

Review: CZ 712 Practical for 3 Gun (Part I)

cz 712 practical shotgun for 3 gunFor the past few months I have been learning the ins and outs of 3 gun shooting competitions and it would have been pretty difficult to accomplish this without a shotgun with which to work. By SHOTShow 2014 I had at home, a rifle and a few pistols, yet, up to that point, shotguns were still not on my radar. So when it came time to bring a shotgun into my world, I wanted to work with one that had some 3 gun mods already, but that might also fall into the category of “entry level”. CZ’s 712 Practical retails for $699.00 and with the brand’s long history of lux sporting shotguns, one can expect a solid platform on which to build.

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