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Paperback Bullseyes Don't Shoot Back Book

ISBN: 0873649575

ISBN13: 9780873649575

Bullseyes Don't Shoot Back

Learn why point shooting is the most practical technique for aiming and shooting a handgun in a real gunfight. This instructional guide teaches you how and when to use point shooting, compares it to... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Format: Paperback

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

A worthwhile read

Having just completed reading this book I found it to be worth reading. This book explains the author's practical approach to self defense "point shooting" with a handgun. BULLSEYES DON'T SHOOT BACK is written using easy to understand language and plenty of photographs.

Great book on Point Shooting

This is a great book on point shooting. Everything you need to learn on point shooting is in this book. It has a little history of point shooting and great illustrations, instructions on how to point shoot. This is a very old,simple, and very effective way of defending yourself. You don't need to do ten steps before you shoot. Point,shoot,effective, what more do you need. This is combat shooting not competition. Im glad I got this book. It has made me a more confident shooter. I am a former combat veteran, awarded among other awards, the Combat Infantry Badge, that should say it all. I am far from a novice and did not just shoot at standing targets.

Applegate Updated

This book updates the close quarter handgun firing section of "Kill or Get Killed." Point shooting has a couple of advantages over using the sights. Focus on the sights psychologically removes the shooter from the gun fight and can increase accuracy--but the human eye can focus on only one thing at a time. Fratricide (shooting brother police officers) is one of the pitfalls of using your sights. You need target focus if you are to identify your target--and know what your target is doing at the moment you shot. Sight focus is important beyond 25 feet--this varies between people--and target focus is vital at ten feet or less. Most gunfights take place at close range because criminal activity is an anti-social social activity. The book, "Body Language" explains the distances for social interaction and how you can fool almost anybody at 25 feet, but have a lot of trouble doing so at 4 feet. Most of the police officers who died from bullet injuries in the line of duty were shot from distances of less than ten feet--often, by other police officers. Memorizing the grooves in your front sight instead of looking for body language clues when your enemy is close enough to touch is losing situational awareness--you'd have shot already if your target was doing something that justified shooting! The uncertain nature of close quarter encounters is why point shooting must be part of the skill set possessed by every soldier, law enforcement officer, and armed private citizen. Today's handguns have better sights--so low light, stress-induced visual impairment, and the effects of getting a face full of tear gas don't have the same effect as when armed with a M1911A1 issued in 1942. Point shooting is quick to learn, and point shooting skills don't decay as rapidly as using the sights. It's a choice between target focus and front sight focus. Up close--target focus. At a distance--front sight focus. Applegate's choice of the Glock automatic may surprise some--he chose that pistol for its grip angle and reliable functioning. Many ranges won't permit the use of Vector "low temperature tracer" ammunition because of a perceived fire hazard--in some areas, all tracer ammunition is prohibited. I don't recall Applegate recommending the use of AirSoft guns (with their low-velocity brightly colored plastic projectiles), but the projectile can be observed and corrections made in grip and trigger control when tracers are impractical. Fairbairn and Sykes taught Applegate to fire "bursts" in order to make up for the low power of pistol bullets. The two British police officers were using the .45 automatic with full metal jacketed bullets fighting crime in Shanghai about 80 years ago. Applegate developed the two-shot burst as a fire discipline tool--there's a tendancy to shoot only one time and gape when the target doesn't fall down. There's another problem brought on by "cold ranges" (guns only loaded for a firing string, then loaded and cleared upon comm

Tactical Firing Solution

I am a recent convert to Applegate. I have been shooting for some time now, with limited results using frontsite focus, controlled breathing, squeeze trigger, be surprised when the round goes off, blah, blah, blah. The problem is...way to much fine motor skill required. When our heart rate goes to 145 bpm ie adrenilin dump, we enter the gross motor skill zone. All the fine motor skill crap will go out the window...Weaver, Chapmann, Iscosoles, all of it, unless you train for hundreds of hours to create 'muscle memory'. Most of us just don't have time, we will go to gross motor skills, as will most of the 'Experts'.That's Applegates entire premise, and he is a true WW II combat expert, what is old, is now new, plus it could save your life! I tried Point Shooting yesterday, fired 250 rounds at 45 feet (beyond the 30' range accuracy of point shooting), it works -BUY THIS BOOK!PS - Applegate does endorse the Iscosoles stance for distance shooting, only if time allows, or whatever type of fine motor skill stance for that matter, but within 30' - Point Shoot.

Straight, no-nonsense practical advice

This book by two noted personalities in self-defense circles gives lots of practical information on practice of using firearms. Inside, you will find discussions covering topics like techniques, tactics, and training.Due to the deadly seriousness of the subject matter, I appreciate the concise, no-nonsense style of writing and the practical advice presented in the book. The photos and illustrations are clear and add to the usefullness of the book. While I still think Massad Ayoob's 'In the Gravest Extreme' and 'The Truth About Self protection' are the best books on this subject, this book does a fine job as well.
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