Unless you are dead last.I don't worry about timers. Distraction to doing it correctly and making the first shot count. Speed will follow.
No matter how much you practice, not everyone will be a Cisco.
Fast is fine. Accurate is final.
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Like it or not, I'm not all that 24/7, 360 degree awareness guy any more. Sure it's good to see the truck coming but not everybody does. This makes me think there is at least as good a chance it will boil down to a "race" I don't want to lose and I'm going to give my self all the head start I can get.
I don't want to be trying it all out for the first time with everything on the line.
I KNOW for a fact if I've got my hand on my gun I've got at least a half sec head start over any where else my hand could be, I won't know if I'll need it or not. Hope I never have to find out. If I've got my gun out in my hand I KNOW I've got way better than a half second head start over just having my hand on it. I KNOW exactly how close I need to be and how long it takes me to double tap a head and how much quicker I can get two in the chest at 5 yards, 10 yards, and 25 yards.
I'm not saying I'm fast, I never even made a comment other than to say I know what I can do and how different situations affect BOTH sides of my own competency level. Throw down a few common situations and I think I'll have a pretty fair idea if it will be more risky for me to wait/maneuver or get it done before things get worse.
A timer takes the guess work out of "well it's probably good enough". At least the guess work on my own side of the equation. Learned a few things since I got this timer thing I never even knew I didn't know.
ad in under a second at 10 feet easy if I've got my
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