How to Shoot Insane Double Taps with Bob Vogel

Great info. I learned something new today. I will have to see how to apply it in my pistol shooting and then teach it to others.

Thanks for posting this.
 
I will be applying his technique to my shooting going forward.

Vogel is a machine.
 
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Vogel is a BEAST... but did his muzzle awareness and the downrange antics give anyone else some anxiety?

Am I getting uptight?

LOL!
 
Vogel is a BEAST... but did his muzzle awareness and the downrange antics give anyone else some anxiety?

Am I getting uptight?

LOL!

Yeah you are. Lol

Be cool, safety is always the focus, it's application is driven by ability.
 
Great stuff on there, but I can't do the angled grip like he does. Tried it in dry fire for a week a while back and my left wrist hurt like crazy.
 
When I came upon his grip video from a while back it changed my shooting completely.
Still have a long way to go, but I am a Vogel fan and feel like his explanations of gripping are some of the most useful stuff I have seen.
 
Tension in the right places is a good thing. In the wrong places it's a bad thing. I'm not that far forward with the support hand, but I put a lot of pressure in and on my pinkie finger of my support hand to help with muzzle flip. Apparently I'm not putting enough, wow. lol
 
Tension in the right places is a good thing. In the wrong places it's a bad thing. I'm not that far forward with the support hand, but I put a lot of pressure in and on my pinkie finger of my support hand to help with muzzle flip. Apparently I'm not putting enough, wow. lol
If you follow Bob, for such slender/average appearing arms he has a pretty intense grip strength, which I get the impression he works on regularly, does like a #2 or 3 captain of crush, which is supposed to be 195 or 280lbs of grip force respectively. Not to say that his mechanics aren't very good for most shooters to try to emulate, but there's more to his recoil management than meets the eye.
 
I'm a rookie but I placed the video a couple times and it appears he fills the gap left by the right hand to put more surface area on the weapon. One thing I also noticed is he has more finger in the trigger than most teach. I'll give the technique a try next time outside on steel. That 28 yard sequence was crazy good.
 
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