paracowboy said:We’re ignoring a point here. We’ve become so programmed by Hollywood that people assume that once you’re hit, you fall down and die. Or rather, you fly backwards and die.
Third world armies don’t believe that. So you can hit them several times, and they don’t fall down. Even when hit in the torso.A better round would change his mind.
3PPCLI is already making good headway with this by teaching the Gunfighter Program, not only to our troops, but to CS/CSS in Brigade. Different skillset for closer ranges. And, the CF has ALWAYS taught to shoot for the center of visible mass, and that is usually the torso. Whether in the prone at 300, or standing at 25.vonGarvin said:Well, for shorter ranges, where a fatal shot is NEEDED, we need to train to instinctively shoot "the magic spot". For longer ranges, shoot as is currently taught?
But, if you hit him twice in the chest, and he ain't stopped, then marksmanship takes a second seat to bullet effectiveness, doesn't it? I'd much prefer a sloppy hit that stopped Abdul Q. Jihadi, then a perfect hit that didn't even slow him down.I mean, if the bad guy is at say 250 metres, a near fatal shot may be enough to incapacitate him until you close with and destroy. Heck, even if it just suppresses him, you've done the trick.
damn skippy!So I guess it comes down to realistic and relevant training, including simunition augmenting live fire.
paracowboy said:But, if you hit him twice in the chest, and he ain't stopped, then marksmanship takes a second seat to bullet effectiveness, doesn't it? I'd much prefer a sloppy hit that stopped Abdul Q. Jihadi, then a perfect hit that didn't even slow him down.
nobody, least of all Infidel or me, is arguing against marksmanship. (We've both bemoaned the lack of proper gun handling on here enough, I'm sure.) We're arguing that marskmanship alone is not going to solve the problem we're facing. If it were just a matter of shot placement, we could arm everyone with .22 Short. But, small bullets are not as effective as big ones at making people lie down and play dead. Big bullets are not as easy to control. The compromise is a medium bullet, or pumping up the small one to it's maximum effect.a_majoor said:In spite of the bulletology arguments, marksmanship training will always be the key. After all, the supply system might break down and you could end up firing plain old SS-109 5.56, or even lighter American ammunition rather than some "wonder round" hand crafted by I6 or carved from the finest material on paracowboy's CNC milling machine. If the round does not hit the target, there is little effect (the guy might flinch or drop to the ground and hide when he hears the round snap past), but if it does hit, then you get a positive effect, even if it does not kill him outright.
yes. In other words: more shooting; more realistic training involving shooting and working your way down to head-butts and groin kicks; and a new round with little change to the envelope - better 5.56 round, or preferably adopting the 6.8mm in the Minimi and Colt we're currently using.So the bottom line is we need to make the best use of the tools available (what are you going to do when you are out of ammo and have to pick up a discarded AK-47, for example?), while working towards evolving the tools to their best potential.
+1 100%paracowboy said:yes. In other words: more shooting; more realistic training involving shooting and working your way down to head-butts and groin kicks
I don't think any of us are actually arguing. We're all saying pretty much the same thing, in different terms (if that made any sense). But, I like this thread, and the clarification we're achieving. (I hope the one on Simmunition and LEO/Infantry tactics will be as interesting. I'm having a lot of fun, here.)a_majoor said:I'm not really arguing with you paracowboy, (at least not until my Kevlar turtleneck T shirts arrive ), but we need to frame the argument to take into account we might not always be getting the ammunition natures we desire.
I know this is the most do-able scenario, and am only harping on 6.8 in the hopes of keeping it on the radar. The costs are not only prohibitive, but astronomical. Unless Uncle Sam goes with it, and as the first post pointed out, it ain't a-gonner happen. But, I'm goin' down fightin'! As I said, They win, but I'm right.Let's push for better 5.56 and improved training, so there will be a result in our lifetimes.
paracowboy said:We’re ignoring a point here. We’ve become so programmed by Hollywood that people assume that once you’re hit, you fall down and die. Or rather, you fly backwards and die.....
But in reality, a human can soak up a LOT of rounds before going down. Look at the example of that young policewoman, who was shot seven times, and still killed her attackers. 7 times. The human body can take an incredible amount of damage.