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| Dual Pistol Loadouts and
Techniques |
| Photos: |
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| Introduction |
After several threads appearing at Airsoft
Forum about Dual Pistol shooting, I decided to write this
little article with my theories and experience with this often
controversial subject. I first tried doing the Dual Pistols
thing in the Summer of 04, after reading THIS
article at Arnie's Airsoft. When I first tried it, it was
out of necessity, because I was having trouble with my new
AUG. I used my Western Arms Xcelerator 5 inch Ltd. and my
teammates Glock 19. I did so well, that I made it my goal
to get myself a 2nd 5" Xcelerator and go Dual Pistols
whenever I can. The following is my theories on the subject,
some I learned in practice and some I have yet to try out
myself.
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| Necessary Skills |
There are several skills you must master as an EFFECTIVE
dual pistoleer playing amongst skilled AEG users. Some of
these relate to the actual act of Dual Pistol shooting, but
many deal with having the proper equipment and state of mind.
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| Choosing the Right
Pistols and Equipment |
The right pistols to use depends a
lot on what kind of field your going to be playing in.
If your going to be in CQB, you can get away with just about
any barrel length. A pair of KSC/KWA Glock 19s, Glock 17s
or etc... will work great. In the ranges involved with CQB
engagements, longer barrel pistols are not required. Also
in the closer ranges of CQB, you should use .25 gram bbs rather
than .20 gram bbs. The trade off for better bb flight stability
in lieu of longer range, is going to help you a lot. You do
NOT want to use something with full auto capability (18C,
26C etc.) as you will go through your ammunition to fast.
When using Dual Pistols as your main weapon, its more about
quality rather than quantity of your shots. This goes for
all environments, not just CQB.
For urban and woodland medium-long range, you NEED to have
at least a pair of 5 inch pistols. 6 inch is better. The longer
barrels are important to your ability to get straight shots
at longer ranges. In my opinionthe best choices for this role
are going to be the Western Arms Prokiller or SVI series of
1911 framed pistols. They are very accurate and come with
the 30 round mags. Their excellent cycle time will also aid
in higher ROF. The Western Arms magazine loading tool is also
one of the best I have seen. If you can't afford WA's, just
make sure you get a set of good quality 5 inchers.
Magazines: If your going to be a real DEDICATED Dual Pistoleer,
you NEED to have at least 6 magazines, or 3 for each pistol.
Alternatively, you can get 2 normal mags and 2 high capacity
mags. For the before mentioned WA series guns, standard mags
hold 30 rounds, and high caps hold 50 rounds. What you have
to ask yourself though, is whether or not you can hold 2 heavy
pistols with heavy extended mags, at arms length for a long
period of time. This last year I did my best having only 3
mags, and it was very difficult. At the longer of the games
I was in, I was forced to holster one pistol after expending
my initial magazines and bring bbs and gas out into the field
with me, and try to reload mags...trust me that sucks. There
is a new product out that will make in field gas mag reloading
easier. That item is the GB Tech TD Distraction Device, which
is a fake grenade that houses a refillable gas canister, with
which you can fill your pistol mags.
You also will need a good vest that can hold at least one
of your pistols and all your mags. I recommend the Blackhawk
Industries Omega Tactical Vest or the Blackhawk Omega Crossdraw
Pistol Mag Vest. With the standard Omega vest, you can actually
carry both pistols, as they can be held in the full size mag
pouches. I usually put one in the far left pouch under my
arm, and one in the first right pouch as a cross draw. Then
I put my pistol mags in the remaining pouches, you can fit
2 in one pouch. So for the total of six pouches you have:
Far Left: 5 inch SVI Xcelerator
Middle Left: Dummy grenade gas refill canister.
Front Left: Two 30 round mags
Front Right: 5 inch SVI Xcelerator
Middle Right: Two 30 round Mags
Far Right: BB Bottle and Reload tool.
This gives me a total of 180 rounds loaded, with the possibility
of reloads in the field. To be honest, I don't yet have all
my mags, I am considering getting 2 of the 50 round WA high
cap mags, which would give me a possible of 220 rounds loaded.
I would then use the high caps as a last resort, as 5 inch
pistols with high caps would be very heavy to carry around
one handed.
To sum up, this is a list of all the items I recommend you
have to be a properly outfitted Dual Pistoleer:
* Two identically sized pistols, for best results, two completely
identical pistols.
* Six Magazines
* Tactical Vest
* GB tech TD Distraction Device
* BB bottle that fits in your mag pouch
* Reloading tool
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| Dual Pistol, single
target acquisition and alignment |
When aiming at a single target with both pistols, you obviously
can't use the sights. That doesn't mean you cant aim though.
How do you aim you ask? Simple, point both pistols at your
target, put your target directly in the center of the pistols,
and shoot. Bear in mind that this method only works well in
close to close medium range. (Less than 70 feet). I'm not
saying that it wont work at longer ranges, but it doesn't
work well. The key thing you have to realize is, that the
bbs fired from both guns wont be traveling in the same direction.
Due to the mechanics of the human body, It is very difficult
for a person to hold 2 pistols perfectly parallel. Because
of this, the trajectory of your bbs create 2 triangles, one
pointing away from you, and one pointing towards you. The
key thing here, is that if your target is far enough away
for it to be beyond the triangle pointing away from you, you
have to make sure they do not pass down the sides of the target.
This is where knowing your target's range is important. See
the diagram below to explain this:

If you think that your target is out of optimal range, then
you need to use the pistol in your primary hand, and take
an aimed shot using the sights. For this reason, it is very
important that you practice one handed shots while target
practicing. You wont always be able to use both pistols at
the same time, and putting one pistol away, so you can shoot
2 handed for these longer range shots, is not practical.
Shooting around cover with both pistols is also a skill you
must practice. You don't don't want to expose over half of
your body to take your shots, so you have to lean over far
enough that you can point both pistols around the cover, almost
so that one pistol is directly above the other. Now when shooting
like this, it is VERY important that your hop up is adjusted
properly. An overly adjusted hop up, will make the bbs fly
way out to the side. This happens because gravity is no longer
working to pull the bbs down away from the direction of the
hop up.
The other option of course is to simply use only one pistol,
the one in the hand on the side you are shooting from. Just
remember that this will offset the balance of ammo in the
pistols, meaning that one will run out of ammo sooner, causing
you to prematurely reload one of them. You can avoid this
by, when convenient, taking the same number of single pistol
shots, with the other hand.
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| Dual target, Split
Hemisphere Targeting |
Split Hemisphere Targeting (SHT) is most often used while
attempting to cover two different points of entry or Points
Of Contact (POC). It sometimes may be used during a brave
yet foolhardy rush into the fray, but this usually does not
work that well. If it does work, its very fantastic looking
and usually wins you hurrahs and congratulations from both
your teammates and your enemy, but as I said, that is rare.
So, in this section, I will focus on the use of SHT as a tool
for covering dual or multiple POCs.
I will start with a story of the first time I ever successfully
used this technique in the field. Then I will provide an analysis
of that event, to help explain what I did right, and what
I learned I did wrong.
The Story: It was the first game I had attempted a
dual pistol loadout. I had a 5 WA Xcelerator in my right
hand and a KWA Glock 19 in my left. I was playing at CPX in
Joliet, IL on the field called Mounds. This field
was approximately 2/3s the size of a football field and is
filled with many 6-7 foot tall dirt mounds, each covered with
field grass and/or weeds. The round had gone fairly well,
even teams made the eliminations happen in close succession
on each side. It had come down to 2 vs. 4, (from a 25 vs.
25 total) with the opposing team having the advantage. I was
alone, and had just watched our third remaining teammate get
eliminated to my left, with the shot coming from the other
side of the mound I was currently behind. My last teammate
was to my right about 4 mounds (or 15 yards) over. I knew
that there was at least one enemy on the other side of the
mound I was at, but didnt know how far beyond the mound
he was. Figuring the tango would advance after eliminating
my teammate, I waited, holding one pistol towards the left
of the mound, and one to the right, all the while trading
off right and left guns to point towards the top of the mound,
in case he breeched the top. Every 2-3 seconds, I switched
my LOS from side to side to sight down each pistol, hoping
that I would be looking the right way when the tango came
around. I also kept very close attention to sounds from all
sides, ready to fire at any sound I heard.
I waited
. After about what seemed like an eternity,
I decide he must be holding up, or perhaps has changed position
entirely. I decided to make a quick pop up over the top of
the mound, to see what I could see. I brought my two pistols
together in front of me in that classic dual fire mode, and
then sprang up the hill to see
.. 3 tangos! They were
huddled around the base of another hill, covering all forward
angles BUT the top of my mound. I squeezed the triggers of
both my pistols about 3 times each, eliminating one of the
three. I leapt back down to the back side of my mound and
immediately resumed my SHT stance, waiting for one of the
two remaining to come for me. Then, to my left, one tango
came barreling around the mound, just as I had switched my
targeting view to that side, and
pop pop pop! He went
down. Now it was 1 vs. 2, our favor, but I couldnt see
my own teammate any more.
I remained in my SHT stance, waiting for the last Tango to
make his move. I had just moved my left pistol up towards
the top of the hill when the last Tango breeched it, I was
so lucky I had changed my left side targeting to the top of
the hill! I fired
1 shot, just missed
second shot...
SLIDE LOCKED! Crap
out of ammo! Before I could bring
the right hand pistol around to bear, I was dead
and
that last Tango went on to eliminate our last man.
OK, good story right? Now lets tear it down
and explain the good and the bad:
My first mistake was one I had no control over, one which
I later remedied on future Dual Pistol games. That mistake
was using two different sized pistols which had 2 different
ammo capacities. That alone is a bad thing. The reason being,
it requires that you keep track of one more thing during the
game, which is that difference in ammo capacities while counting
shots down from each pistol. It was that difference, which
aided my failure in the above story. But it was not the only
mistake I made. I will get back to that later though. Right
now, lets cover the targeting technique.
The split hemisphere is an even separation of the distance
between your right hand pistol and your left hand pistol.
It is NOT split down the center of your body. Lets use a clock
face as an example. Lets say that your head is at the
center of the clock, and your right and left shoulders are
at 3 and 9 oclock respectively. You are covering a block
of cover, or in the case of the story, a dirt mound. You have
to worry about not only your right and left, but the top POC
as well. This means covering 3 possible POCs with 2
weapons and only one set of eyes. While covering left and
right, your pistols are extended out to 2 and 10 oclock.
In this position, the split in your targeting hemispheres
is at 12 oclock. So while in this position, you must
turn your head, just enough to the left and right of 12 oclock,
to see where your pistols are pointing. While in this stance,
you are targeting on 2 hemispheres (left and right), AND acquiring
on a separate front hemisphere (while crossing the 12 oclock,
you get a view of the top of the hill, but since no weapon
is pointed there, you arent targeting.) You have to
continually switch your view from left to right, it is usually
luck that determines if you are looking the right way when
a target presents itself but, with a keen sense of hearing,
you can increase your chances. Now if the target presents
itself, and you happen to be ready on the side it comes from,
you pop off 3 rounds in that direction, no sights, just point
and shoot. Pretend the pistol is the tip of your finger and
squeeze the trigger. IF your first 3 shots with one pistol
miss, and you have not yet been eliminated, it is a good idea
to swing the second pistol around to target and go Dual Pistol
alternating fire with the left and right. Now, if the target
were to appear at the top of the hill rather than on your
left or right, and you see it happen in time, you merely bring
both pistols together at 12 oclock and fire.
Now if you are fast enough, you can shift your LOF from left
to right and back, to increase your chances of hitting a target
coming from the top of the hill at 12 oclock. This makes
for a much more complicated system, but if you can do it,
it makes covering such multiple angles more efficient. In
this system your targeting field is halved, but your separate
acquisition sphere is larger. With the above mound environment,
you would have your left pistol pointed at 12 oclock,
and your right pointed at 2 oclock. You look right,
(Targeting for both 12 oclock and 2 oclock) then
look to the left, (Acquiring 10 oclock while still targeting
for 12) then right again , while at the same time swing your
left and right pistols over so that your left pistol is now
pointing at 10 oclock, and your right pistol is pointing
at 12 oclock.
Confused? So am I
Since that first time using the shifting
LOF system, I have since avoided it whenever possible. But
now that we have covered the SHT Targeting and Acquisition
systems, I will get on the the mistakes I made. You already
know about the equipment mistake, and the misjudging of ammunition
mistake cause by having pistols with different ammo capacities.
Now for the ultimate cause of my failure: I had already had
the lower capacity magazine in my left hand, but what compounded
my mistake, was my failure to switch up after using my left
pistol to fire on my last target, knowing that the left pistol
had less capacity, AND knowing that I had already used that
pistol for more shots, earlier in the game, before my story
started. I should have realized that my left pistol was most
likely short on ammunition, holstered or dropped it, and switched
to a single pistol configuration with my right hand pistol.
What isnt covered in the above story is simultaneous
fire with both pistols, at separate targets. When this happens,
you are apt to, by instinct, fire one first, then the other,
alternating. Unlike firing both pistols at one target, this
act can get you shot. You will need to train yourself, in
that situation, to squeeze both triggers at the same time,
to ensure the separate targets are fired on at the same time,
otherwise, the target that gets that 1 second delay
gets the advantage over you.
Dual Pistols is more than just shooting with 2 pistols at
the same time, its a system
and you have to be
smart enough, skilled enough, and practice enough, for that
system to work well.
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| Reloads |
Reloading 2 pistols at once is a tricky thing, but with practice
you can do it in a fairly short amount of time. The factors
that will contribute to how easily you can do it are:
The size of your pistols
The Size of your hands
Your degree of manual dexterity
Where you keep your magazines
The following instructions, assume that you are in the heat
of battle, and that both of your slides have locked back after
running out of ammunition on both pistols. I wont worry about
non emergeny reloads in this article.
1.) After your slides have locked back, immediately crouch
down on one knee behind cover, if you are not crouching behind
cover, it would be best if you went and found some. Call for
reload cover fire if your team is able.
2.) Once you have crouched, lower your pistols close to the
ground. (about 6-10 inches) With your best degree of manual
dexterity, reach for both magazine releases (one with your
first finger and one with your thumb) and drop both your magazines
out of your pistol simultaneously (this works best if your
pistols mag drop easily, if they dont, try lubricating the
inside of your mag wells)
3.) Place the pistol in your weak hand next to the pistol
in your dominant hand and hold both pistols in the dominant
hand (one on top of the other) so that both mag wells point
towards your body center (I usually rest my arm on my knee)
4.) With your weak hand, retrieve one magazine from it pouch.
This works best if you have both magazines in one large pouch,
so you dont have to open two pouches. Take one magazine and
slide it into one of the pistols, then retrieve the second
and slide that one into the other pistol. (If your REALLY
good at it, you can try to grab both magazines out of one
pouch at the same time, and slide BOTH magazines into both
pistols at once.... I cant do that very well)
5.) After both fresh magazines are inserted, transfer the
second pistol back to your weak hand, then again.. with your
best manual dexterity, hit your slide release to close the
slides.
At my best, I can accomplish this in about 8-10 seconds (From
the time my slides lock back till I am reloaded and ready
to fire again) I really have not been practicing enough though,
and I am sure that I... and you.... can do better with enough
practice.
Below is a demonstration video of Dual Pistol Reloads in
Windows Media format.
Dual Pistol Reload Video
1.8 Mb, streaming or right click/save as
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