This is a three part class, morning is pistol, afternoon is rifle and then a combo of both pistol and rifle mid afternoon. The latter end was, for the most part, practicing what happens if the rifle goes click and your target is less than 25 yards. You pull pistol and engage. Problem solved.
Having been to many of Apex's classes i was surprised by a few things.
Round count: We shot a lot more than a typical 101 class. I think i did close to 300 pistol from 9-noon and and maybe more of rifle when that time came. I did shoot a bit extra, mostly because i hate to to see unused dots on 8x11 sheets of warm up drills.
Gear: It was cold so we all get a bit of experience seeing how are gear worked in the cold, gloves or no gloves, what does the glove do to your shot placement? And we learned what we didn't like about our set-ups. Once again, we see equipment failures. Lots of them. Guys you need to stress your gear... You need to find out what works and what doesn't before it is life or death right? It's important. Train hard and see what sucks and fix it.
I do not like the placement of my AR sling. Aero puts the hole next to the lower receiver on the rail. It is exactly in the way during a reload, I've noticed it before, but when going for speed reloads it a huge PITA. It was also interesting to see guys like Roland! shooting irons. I need a new front site post for my flip up Magpull sights, i cannot see the front sight worth a damn. I am hoping the Trijicon MRO ( i plan to get) has faster acquisition that the Romeo5. But my take away was, if its up close and personal, is the red dot faster with a rifle? I am not so sure. Certainly Roland! was fast with irons and accurate! May be a no brainer for some of you, but i have always had an optic on my rifle and only practice BUIS through the optic. Just getting the dot in my field of view and on target seemed to be a little slower. Maybe its just a training thing and i need work on it. But it was interesting.
New stuff:
I saw several new drills and new stuff on malfunctions that were very clever. Ryan is to be commended for keeping things fresh and adding new things. I think 6 hours is PLENTY for the class length. But we go another two just to make sure i can barely get out of the car when i get home and walk bent over to the door.
If you haven't taken a class at Apex you really should save your pennies and go. We are EXTREMELY fortunate to have this type of very affordable and varied training in our area. I've been shooting a long time and i can tell you what Apex is doing is uncommon. They have classes every weekend folks. You want to up your game you really should get out there. Plus it is a lot of fun. Most of the folks who show up are all cut from a very similar cloth so we all tend to jive pretty well. At least that is my experience, some people may wish i wasn't there for all i know lol.
Anyway, that is my review. Hope it makes someone think and go train!
V
Having been to many of Apex's classes i was surprised by a few things.
Round count: We shot a lot more than a typical 101 class. I think i did close to 300 pistol from 9-noon and and maybe more of rifle when that time came. I did shoot a bit extra, mostly because i hate to to see unused dots on 8x11 sheets of warm up drills.
Gear: It was cold so we all get a bit of experience seeing how are gear worked in the cold, gloves or no gloves, what does the glove do to your shot placement? And we learned what we didn't like about our set-ups. Once again, we see equipment failures. Lots of them. Guys you need to stress your gear... You need to find out what works and what doesn't before it is life or death right? It's important. Train hard and see what sucks and fix it.
I do not like the placement of my AR sling. Aero puts the hole next to the lower receiver on the rail. It is exactly in the way during a reload, I've noticed it before, but when going for speed reloads it a huge PITA. It was also interesting to see guys like Roland! shooting irons. I need a new front site post for my flip up Magpull sights, i cannot see the front sight worth a damn. I am hoping the Trijicon MRO ( i plan to get) has faster acquisition that the Romeo5. But my take away was, if its up close and personal, is the red dot faster with a rifle? I am not so sure. Certainly Roland! was fast with irons and accurate! May be a no brainer for some of you, but i have always had an optic on my rifle and only practice BUIS through the optic. Just getting the dot in my field of view and on target seemed to be a little slower. Maybe its just a training thing and i need work on it. But it was interesting.
New stuff:
I saw several new drills and new stuff on malfunctions that were very clever. Ryan is to be commended for keeping things fresh and adding new things. I think 6 hours is PLENTY for the class length. But we go another two just to make sure i can barely get out of the car when i get home and walk bent over to the door.
If you haven't taken a class at Apex you really should save your pennies and go. We are EXTREMELY fortunate to have this type of very affordable and varied training in our area. I've been shooting a long time and i can tell you what Apex is doing is uncommon. They have classes every weekend folks. You want to up your game you really should get out there. Plus it is a lot of fun. Most of the folks who show up are all cut from a very similar cloth so we all tend to jive pretty well. At least that is my experience, some people may wish i wasn't there for all i know lol.
Anyway, that is my review. Hope it makes someone think and go train!
V