Model 15-4ever
Member
With revolvers, we were always taught to count rounds. After awhile it becomes unconscious and automatic. Revolvers reload relatively slowly, so knowing when you are running low or out is important.
Having said that, experience has shown that the ability to count past 6 or 7 rounds gets lost quickly in a stress situation. What works for a revolver, or a 7-shot autoloader, in a gunfight isn't practical with a larger capacity pistol. You shoot to lockback and quickly reload, or wait for a lull and top off.
I competed regularly - and placed - in USPSA for about 5-6 years, in both Limited 10 and Single-Stack. USPSA is a game: the only stress there is self-imposed. You have the luxury of pre-viewing the entire stage of fire, and planning your magazine changes to minimize time (and therefore maximize your score). You are neither shot at, nor maneuvered against. What gamers do while gaming isn't too relevant for this topic.
Having said that, experience has shown that the ability to count past 6 or 7 rounds gets lost quickly in a stress situation. What works for a revolver, or a 7-shot autoloader, in a gunfight isn't practical with a larger capacity pistol. You shoot to lockback and quickly reload, or wait for a lull and top off.
I competed regularly - and placed - in USPSA for about 5-6 years, in both Limited 10 and Single-Stack. USPSA is a game: the only stress there is self-imposed. You have the luxury of pre-viewing the entire stage of fire, and planning your magazine changes to minimize time (and therefore maximize your score). You are neither shot at, nor maneuvered against. What gamers do while gaming isn't too relevant for this topic.
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