Despite likely a couple million rounds down range, the thing about Jerry is that he still seams to have so much fun shooting.
It's hard to believe how good he is. And, it's across all platforms including all long guns. Pick your poison and he will beat you at it!
400 yards, off-hand. Three times in a row. Less than 5 seconds. Holy. Crap.
This is the one that really blows me away:
I sent the 400 yard video to a friend of mine. His response: "When the zombies come, I want to be right behind him."
Plastic weld.Mehh...I got two Glock 20's zip tied together.
Noticed the same thing. Was wondering the same thing.I wonder why the 2 bullets didn't come out at the same time if they were using one common hammer??? Did anyone else notice one bullet being in front of the other??
I imagine tolerance stacking has something to do with it. One hammer might be different slightly, etc.
Ammo slightly different. One primer may be a hair deeper, for example.
I'd be more surprised if they came out at the same time. We're talking milliseconds here.
Right. Its a matter of a few fps difference.I imagine tolerance stacking has something to do with it. One hammer might be different slightly, etc.
Ammo slightly different. One primer may be a hair deeper, for example.
I'd be more surprised if they came out at the same time. We're talking milliseconds here.
Two triggers on each gun.In the shots of the gun they seem to only have one hammer for both barrels and one trigger to release said hammer. He said at the beginning what ammo he was using so I would assume consistence throughout from the ammo standpoint. Baffles me...
I recalled him saying that the triggers AND hammers were tied together AND that he was shooting the same ammo. That's why I can't reason with the bullets being behind each other... I even took camera angle into account..... Strange..
Camera angle?I wonder why the 2 bullets didn't come out at the same time if they were using one common hammer??? Did anyone else notice one bullet being in front of the other??