The “Four S” Shooting Method

In an effort to categorize the skills that make a good shooter I have come up with four areas.  They all start with the letter “S” hence the “four S shooting method.”

I Safety

Safety should be the primary concern of any shooter, be they a dedicated bench-rest person, skeet shooter, plinker, action shooter or training for combat.  Obedience to Colonel Cooper’s four rules is imperative.  Mastering safe weapons handling now will reduce the risk of injuries or death while training or competing. If you ever have to use a firearm for its intended purpose it will reduce the risk of friendly fire casualties.

II Stance

Artillery pieces have a large heavy carriage or baseplate from which to shoot.  The purpose of this is to make the barrel more stable during firing.  With small arms you are the baseplate.  The position of your body and the interface of you to the weapon (grip) are major components to how accurate you will be.  In practical vs. target shooting there is the additional need to be flexible in stance.  This is in order to be able to move quickly in and out of the position to move as well as to be able to better utilize cover.  In most positions we shoot from the waste up.  There are many arguments as to foot location and over all position.  What is critical here is that you weight is evenly distributed between your feet (if standing) or other ground contact points (other positions.)  Do not worry to much about textbook pictures of shooting positions.  Odds are that if you are using a textbook position you are not using cover and concealment correctly.

III Sight Picture

This is how you choose where you want your bullet to go.  There are a variety of sights available, peep, v-notch, bead, red dot, telescopic etc.  The point of all of these is to give you a reference of where your bullet should travel when you squeeze the trigger.  You must master your particular sight type.  I am a firm believer in starting off with iron sights.  I feel that using iron sights is like stick shift cars.  You might think you drive well with an automatic, but if you can’t drive a stick you will never really understand driving.  This doesn’t mean I’m not a believer in modern technology.

IV Squeeze

This is the final step to the shooting act, the manipulation of the trigger to fire the gun.  An effective trigger squeeze requires a familiarity with your firearm that can only come with extensive dry firing, as triggers vary greatly from platform to platform.  But the universal rule in accurate shooting is that the trigger “break” when the hammer or striker falls should be a surprise.
[Via Every citizen A Soldier]

4 Responses

  1. Bob Mayne

    If I could, I would like to add one more S,…Speed. Speed comes after mastering the first 4 you discussed, but speed is critical. Being able to shoot fast and accurately. Concentrate on accuracy first, speed will come later, but it's important from the aspect of engaging multiple attackers. I hope that's not the case, but you could find youself in that situation.

    Reply
  2. Jim Shy Wolf

    Awww, damn, just when I was beginnin’ to think I’d FINALLY got people to STOP worryin’ about the damn stance, THIS comes up!
    Piss on the stance and what the hell is in the background. We’re talking about saving our asses or that of someone we love.
    Learn to shoot laying on your back, on your belly, rolling across the damn ground, while running full-tilt across a damn logjam. This bullshit about being nice and frivolous and being concerned with how your feet are placed is BS in a real life situation- unless all you ever intend shooting is a target that isn’t moving or shooting back.
    IMO- it’s way past time to grow beyond the NRA and become real shooters.
    Sight picture? who the hell needs a sight picture when the target is two feet away? Or ten? Shoot the sonofabitch. Pull the trigger till ‘it’ falls. You might be able to drive a stick, but until you can speed shift you have no idea what the tranny will do without a clutch.
    Squeezin the trigger is a good idea. If all you’re doing is being concerned with ettiquette. If that bastard is coming on, forget about squeeze and just pull the damned trigger till ‘it’ makes a rapid adjustment in direction- like to the ground.
    Shy III

    Reply
  3. Bob Mayne

    Nice post. I needed to be reminded of these 4 steps. May I add, that when shooting pistols remember, for step 3 on your list, the most important sight is the front sight! Often times, that's the only sight you will ever see in a self defense situation. Practice focusing on that front sight and putting it on target. I recommend XS Big Dot Sights for a defensive pistol (www.xssights.com)

    Reply
  4. Currahee

    I'm wondering if Shy Wolf even read what it said under "Stance"

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.