Duly noted but whether you believe the weapon should have cleared leather or not does not speak to the many references about "MIL looking down the barrel of a gun..." and "She could have been hit..." hence the exploration of what low ready means, at least to those trained in the military.frankie_the_yankee wrote:Nope. The gun never should have left the holster in my opinion.Dragonfighter wrote: We may be having an issue with definitions here.
And your injecting factors not in evidence. I "allowed" for the possibility of an accidental discharge but the reality of a "low ready" would indicate that his finger wasn't in the trigger guard. This also deflects the issue, I say again, MIL wasn't looking down the barrel of anything.frankie_the_yankee wrote:And if that carpet and plywood you refered to above was on the 2nd floor, then people going about their business in an apartment below could have been endangered.Me wrote:If Cipher went to "low ready" the weapon wasn't pointed at anybody and had it discharged he would've (in a peer and beam) been out some carpet and plywood. The MIL wasn't looking down the barrel of anything.
First, why should self-protection reflexes be any different in CONUS peace time? Complacency, delayed reactions, this is good?frankie_the_yankee wrote:In a war zone maybe. But I don't live in one and I would guess that Cipher doesn't either.Me wrote:Readying the weapon should be instinctual. Forming a sight picture,dropping the finger inside the guard and discharging the weapon should be a rapid chain of analysis and reaction.
Second, I don't know where the man lives, it may very well be a "war zone". I also don't know what his past holds that established the mindset.
Third. Alarm=Ready=Reflex=Instinct. The target acquisition and elimination is what is and should be willful and analytical. Thinking about whether or not to ready will get you killed. The fact that it was the MIL is a non-issue, he had no prior knowledge and I think both learned from the experience.
I don't follow you here.frankie_the_yankee wrote:What do we need - three drills? One for the 1st floor (no basement) to go to low ready. Another for the 2nd floor of a 2 story building to (maybe?) go to high ready? And if the building is more than two stories, then what? Dive out the nearest window (along with your family of course)?
This was meant as an illustration to further elucidate the difference between "low ready", "high ready" and the target acquisition/elimination process. It had no bearing on the actual circumstance Cipher found himself in. My apologies that it was disconnected to the point that it was lost as a pertinent part of the post or this thread.frankie_the_yankee wrote:I think clearing a building is not what Cipher was doing and is at best a topic for another thread.Me wrote: When I clear a building, I have the weapon at "low ready" and will be at "high ready" entering a blind room. The last thing that happens is the finger going into the guard after I have ID'd the target and obtained a sight picture (a smooth split second move).
I think that has been well covered by others. Nah, Cipher did okay. No one was hurt and he has learned something, as I suspect his MIL has.frankie_the_yankee wrote:
No one is getting slammed. Cipher didn't ask for support. He asked for advice. He's getting it.
Kyle
Edited multiple times to correct spelling and BB code.