Welcome to my world, of course my burns have burns.
Mark of the weldor
Welcome to my world, of course my burns have burns.
ass helps to keep a gap outta your pants.Pants might help a little bit there.
If you keep talking about someone’s discharge in your face, you’re gonna wind up in the Out of Context thread.It’s not MY brass that hit me in the face this time. It was somebody else’s (shooting to the left of me in a class).
Well, I tried some practice draws/ fire from my concealed carry holster in everyday clothes today, and forgot about the need for a high neckline to avoid doing the hot brass dance.
It’s anticlimactic though, because I’m just pretty calm like that, hahahaha.
I was trying a quick fire with one hand as soon as I cleared the holster. This worked pretty well, except for the brass part. It kept happening, too.
Overall, I’m not unhappy with how I did. I had to lean back a bit to get at the gun under my breast, and honestly I also wanted to lean back because as I was drawing I didn’t want to lean forward and then have the firearm pointed in towards my pelvis as I draw, ya know?
I WAS careful not to sweep my hand as I reholstered. From that angle, it does look a little sketchy, but I promise I was careful not to do it.
I love my trigger finger discipline under pressure. I have to say, I’m pretty good at that, at least.
I’ll be practicing this again, at a class on Saturday. I’ll wear a better, closed neck top though!
I just ignore it and keep on shooting. If it goes down the T-shirt, I wiggle it a little and let it cool off at belt level. After years of it, it is just more annoying than some major catastrophe.What gets me though, are the people on the ejection side that give you the stink eye because your brass had the audacity to hit them. When I get peppered with brass, I either stop shooting and back off, or use it as an anti-flinch drill.
I may move a bit, but I will stop and move away if someone if rapid firing.