Bad Guy with a High Powered Strobe Light

Let's up the ante:

He bursts in with a strobe and your gun of choice is a 5 shot revolver. You need to make some blind shots.... All the talk of accurate shooting goes out the window....

I'll stick with 17 rounds of .40 for this scenario.. ;)
 
Let's up the ante:

He bursts in with a strobe and your gun of choice is a 5 shot revolver. You need to make some blind shots.... All the talk of accurate shooting goes out the window....

I'll stick with 17 rounds of .40 for this scenario.. ;)

i'll run the drill with 8 rounds of #0 myself.
figure 10 lead balls times a string of 8 magic moments would put my dry wall skills to the test the next morning.
 
i'll run the drill with 8 rounds of #0 myself.
figure 10 lead balls times a string of 8 magic moments would put my dry wall skills to the test the next morning.

Well, yeah.... :D

I don't have a shotgun in my bedroom and I should. I have several in the safe, and a slug barrel on a 12 gauge would be perfect, loaded with some buckshot. Right behind the door or in the closet.... ;)
 
I am sure that LEO's have practised this and would like to hear how they handled it.

Yes, it's true we do practice for that eventuality, right after we get back from the "all the animals from the zoo escaped" scenario. The only difference is that we combine Led Zepplin's "When The Levy Breaks" with the strobe in case we have to kick the door at Timothy Leary's house.

I'm sorry for the facetious response, but considering training budgets there are a LOT of things that we don't practice for.....Like what happens if a burglar releases 30 racoons in your house to make you use up all your ammo before he enters to take your Philco TV because he only has a 2-shot Derringer and is afraid you have a 30-round magazine?
 
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Yes, it's true we do practice for that eventuality, right after we get back from the "all the animals from the zoo escaped" scenario. The only difference is that we combine Led Zepplin's "When The Levy Breaks" with the strobe in case we have to kick the door at Timothy Leary's house.

I'm sorry for the facetious response, but considering training budgets there are a LOT of things that we don't practice for.....Like what happens if a burglar releases 30 racoons in your house to make you use up all your ammo before he enters to take your Philco TV because he only has a 2-shot Derringer and is afraid you have a 30-round magazine?
one must train for the usual suspects first then the most probable unusual ones as resources allow.
it would seem that the thugs have equal access to the non firearm hardware as any of us, so it is possible we may face some new whizbang gadget like a strobe.
I think its far more likely we'd face off with pepper spray though. its been around longer, its more plentiful and has a track record of effectiveness.
 
I started sleeping with a welding helmet on cause I'm worried about someone kicking in my bedroom door and tossing in a Flash Bang before he hits me with the strobe, then tasers me, before coming over to my bed and macing me.

Any you cops train for that and can tell me if I'm all set?
 
Regardless of the situation, the most important thing is to engage if the fight is brought to you, assuming you couldn't be proactive to diffuse it. At that point, give it your all and pray God is in your corner. It is IMPOSSIBLE to come up with even a tiny portion of all the scenarios that could occur.
 
OK, must say I guess it's possible, but as others have said, I don't think he could get to my bedroom before I heard him- or should I say, before my dog hears him..? The hi-poer strobe is going to disorient you, granted, but it also will make it hard for him to focus on you. Rolling out of bed, on to the floor, shooting towards the light- I guess would be the best bet if you're totally surpised. I just have a little trouble thinking I should spend a lot of time on this one. As we know we should practice as many possible scenarios as possible, and then be aware that the ones we practice for may not be what happens.

Unless that strobe can defeat the nose of my very defencive 75 lb. lab I am not going to be too concerned. After the dog distracts him a bit, or a bite or two, he can deal with my .45.
 
Unless that strobe can defeat the nose of my very defencive 75 lb. lab I am not going to be too concerned. After the dog distracts him a bit, or a bite or two, he can deal with my .45.

My Lab would probably be all lovey on the perp and have her big ol' waggly tail going.... :D
 
OK, then I guess I am overestimating the effects of the strobe.

I have been told that it is so disconcerting that it makes it very difficult to fight.

That it is paralysing.

So I have been misinformed?

In my personal case anyway, you have not been misinformed.

As I have aged a bit I have become (like many) subject to bouts of vertigo. The last one, which lasted several weeks, was brought about by simply watching a bit of a strobe at a concert on my big screen TV.

I can only imagine how debilitating a high powered strobe in person might have been. I suspect I would have gone to my knees instantly, and I imagine many others might suffer the same fate.
 
I know some guys have attack dogs- I have yak-yak-dogs. They'll both bark like crazy- but if the BG keeps coming they''ll squeal and hide under the bed. Seriously though, the barking is what counts.
Re: the welding helmet- how about fitting it with your own strobe on top? Talk about prepared...
 
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