Best Drill for Recoil Management - Doubles Drill

An excerpt from Vortex Edge Pistol 2 class talking about recoil management utilizing the doubles drill.

Пікірлер: 44

  • @JOHN-hf9ow
    @JOHN-hf9ow Жыл бұрын

    Outstanding instructor. Not arrogant, methodical and able to demonstrate principals

  • @brennanbrennecke3323

    @brennanbrennecke3323

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you!

  • @jdev232

    @jdev232

    8 ай бұрын

    Did you happen to take a haley strategic class?

  • @mikehawkswollen5819
    @mikehawkswollen5819 Жыл бұрын

    Absolutely awesome video 👍

  • @Sometimes_Always
    @Sometimes_Always11 ай бұрын

    Fantastic explanation.. Thank you! I've been front sight focused for SOO many fkin years it's been a monster challenge for me to relearn predictive shooting with target focus.. I shoot A class in Production and this explanation really resonated with me. Thank you!

  • @brennanbrennecke3323

    @brennanbrennecke3323

    11 ай бұрын

    Excellent! Hopefully some of these topics will spur you on to do a deep dive and figure some more stuff out!

  • @Rustebadge
    @Rustebadge Жыл бұрын

    Nice review. Saw this and combat trigger management presented well (for defensive shooting) in Beyond the Muzzle: Firearms Instructor and Shooter Development Guide. Supports much of this presentation.

  • @Giovanni-od7if
    @Giovanni-od7if Жыл бұрын

    Really well explained and demonstrated. New sub 👍

  • @brennanbrennecke3323

    @brennanbrennecke3323

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the sub! I appreciate it!

  • @SoccerVJ2011
    @SoccerVJ2011 Жыл бұрын

    The subject matter expert on this is Ben Stoeger

  • @brennanbrennecke3323

    @brennanbrennecke3323

    Жыл бұрын

    I’ve learned a lot from him and credit him in every class.

  • @StakMusikLI
    @StakMusikLI Жыл бұрын

    Thank you algorithm! And thank you Mr. Instructor man!

  • @brennanbrennecke3323

    @brennanbrennecke3323

    Жыл бұрын

    You bet!

  • @bshadrick
    @bshadrick Жыл бұрын

    As an old(70) student of Frank Garcia this is good stuff! Bill

  • @brennanbrennecke3323

    @brennanbrennecke3323

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for watching!

  • @shafaa1
    @shafaa111 ай бұрын

    This guy can teach.

  • @ezhang128
    @ezhang128 Жыл бұрын

    Great stuff: subed!

  • @libra7624
    @libra762411 ай бұрын

    the proof in recoil management is in the paper, we can measure time and meassure groups, if groups get smaller in the same amount of time it proves recoil control, for recoil control and fast follow up shots my opinion also is a 22 caliber is fine for defense as i have studied it for decades and have been shooting them since 1985, i am able to carry a Buckmark 22 lr with light 10 round magazines they are easy to carry and with a 511 tactical vest i can carry 261 rounds of cci 40 grain maxi mag, a reliable ammo, the Buckmark is dead accurate on vitals, fast mag dumps and can be taken out of battery at close range like other pistols where they can grab your slide, also with the 5.5 inch barrel you can punch with it with lots of blunt force being its all metal, you can do a close quarters compression shot where you push 4 inches into a gut getting 4 more inches of penetration wich it already past 12 inches, tactical training with heart and head shots are dead accurate and accuracy on vitals means no mag changes, mag changes are when you miss the vitals like head not shutting of the lights and heart dropping the blood pressure, a 22 lr through sternum or a rib will drag shards on bone fragments into the heart, a yaw of a 22 lr is a 10 mm or more in its cross section, yawing makes the 22 lr a larger caliber. duds of 22 lr are a simple tap and rack to get the gun back in the fight, long range rapid fire head shots with a Buckmark are dead accurate, the Buckmark 22 lr has extreme precision accuracy for a hostage situaton and used Barreta 22 lr varients were used by the I.D.F in Israel for hostage rescue missions with great success because of low recoil fast accurate shots to head or heart, kieth warren here on youtube showed 22 lr to be a one shot stop head or heart and a cattle rancher uploaded his slaughter video where cattle dropped like a box of rocks, not one stood for even a half second, he shot them all about 5 to 7 yards wich iin research is most of the defence distances a private citzen defends themselves with a firearm, its how you use the firearm is what matters and you train defense senarios with it creating the senarios on the range with drills, in almost all private citizen defense situations incapacitation wasnt neccesary to stop a threat because perps run when a private citizen challenges them even if that private citizen was out numbered, in almost all defense situations cover was near by also its a rare that when you get to cover that a perp will follow you there because they flee not wanting to get shot, claude werner even mentioned its a misconception to think a 22 is not good for defence, if a 22 was bad for defense we would hear about the millions that have used it for defense getting killed but we have not so it means its getting that break in contact sending perps running and person with 22 surviving, for every person who died defending themselves with a 22 you can find just as many who died using a 9 mm, its more about the person behind the gun and all the other variables like training and tactics then it is about caliber, caliber is just one of dozens of other varibles there are in winning a gun fight

  • @mmafanatic-tz5or
    @mmafanatic-tz5or11 ай бұрын

    When i do double taps, my dot is moving in a circular pattern but im atill fairly accurate but as soon as i do 3 shots or bill drills, i have wnough time to crank on my grip and get it to move 12 to 6.

  • @wtdconcepts
    @wtdconcepts Жыл бұрын

    Great instruction! Do you switch from predictive to reactive shooting as you begin to shoot longer and longer ranges or do you think the technique works at almost all distances? (Maybe excluding very far +40yard shots)

  • @thepowerofasinglethought

    @thepowerofasinglethought

    Жыл бұрын

    Def works out to 50+ if you practice enough you can still hit the same hole out to 50 yards i think it can work out to 100 if someone trained even harder

  • @brennanbrennecke3323

    @brennanbrennecke3323

    Жыл бұрын

    Yep! So great question. It’s different for everyone. For most people, it’s hard to shoot predictively and still shoot alphas past about 10 yards. For me, I can push to about 12-15 and still get alphas if my grip is right. 15 and beyond is different levels of reactive shooting.

  • @erxsvn
    @erxsvn Жыл бұрын

    Good stuff. How long did it take for you to be this knowledgeable? Wish I had all your gun wisdom.

  • @brennanbrennecke3323

    @brennanbrennecke3323

    Жыл бұрын

    I bought my first handgun in 2018, and starting training (dry firing, taking classes, shooting at least 1k a month) in January of 2019.

  • @matthewriegner5180

    @matthewriegner5180

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@brennanbrennecke3323nothing shy of all out impressive

  • @davidgean13
    @davidgean13 Жыл бұрын

    Gosh I have so much to do

  • @brennanbrennecke3323

    @brennanbrennecke3323

    Жыл бұрын

    we all do!

  • @13REEPER1313
    @13REEPER131311 ай бұрын

    What pants are those?

  • @jasonschmidt157
    @jasonschmidt157 Жыл бұрын

    What’s your pistol set up currently?

  • @brennanbrennecke3323

    @brennanbrennecke3323

    11 ай бұрын

    Always an M&P 2.0, almost always a 5” pistol.

  • @jamesglennie4373
    @jamesglennie4373 Жыл бұрын

    Do you teach in Texas?

  • @brennanbrennecke3323

    @brennanbrennecke3323

    11 ай бұрын

    I can! Just need a host. DM me on IG if you want. @look_an_asian

  • @jdev232
    @jdev2328 ай бұрын

    Have you taken a haley strategic class?

  • @brennanbrennecke3323

    @brennanbrennecke3323

    5 ай бұрын

    No sir

  • @jdev232

    @jdev232

    5 ай бұрын

    @brennanbrennecke3323 you should check into a d5 haley strategic class. They don't do controlled doubles. You shoot strings of at least 5, with the thought that somewhere around 4/5 is where grip starts to fall apart. Doubles is easy to maintain. Very thorough, with science behind to back up. As I've been to vortex with a friend that wanted to take the beginners class, the haley, is for shooters to improve what they know. 👍🏼👍🏼

  • @brennanbrennecke3323

    @brennanbrennecke3323

    5 ай бұрын

    @@jdev232thanks for the suggestion. Maybe one day I’ll take a Travis class. Doubles is a very long and nuanced discussion. Biggest thing (per the video) is looking to create consistent grip pressures and to develop a consistent pattern of behavior for the gun. Once that is established you can start exploring “predictive” shooting. Doubles done correctly absolutely leads into bill drills, which is 6 rounds. Starting with that is difficult for folks to diagnose what happened on any given shot but when you incorporate a pause between shots like this it’s much easier to track what’s happening.

  • @jdev232

    @jdev232

    5 ай бұрын

    @brennanbrennecke3323 his approach, takes everything you said, and breaks it down even more. Use of at least 5 because good shooters can mask issues with 2/3 shots, but also, single shots broken down into stance, kinesthetic alignment, sight picture, grip, trigger prep, trigger press. And after shot, the data you get, and where your body is after shot.

  • @brennanbrennecke3323

    @brennanbrennecke3323

    5 ай бұрын

    @@jdev232lol understood. What I’d encourage you to remember is that this clip is an EXCERPT from a full class I was teaching. It does not contain the full context. :)

  • @mrhkp2000
    @mrhkp200011 ай бұрын

    I spend at least 100-200rds pistol & rifle per range session shooting doubles.

  • @brennanbrennecke3323

    @brennanbrennecke3323

    11 ай бұрын

    That’s good for ya.

  • @pastapaul150
    @pastapaul1509 ай бұрын

    Stole that from Ben Stoeger.

  • @brennanbrennecke3323

    @brennanbrennecke3323

    5 ай бұрын

    I first saw doubles being talked about by Ben but he wasn’t the first to do them. I absolutely credit those I’ve learned from. This was an excerpt from a class in which I had already made that distinction.