Making Your Ammo Count... How to train with 100 rounds!

Published on March 5, 2021
Duration: 4:32

Joe Farewell of Farewell Firearms Training introduces the 'Two Box Drill' target from Legion Targets, designed for efficient training with 100 rounds. The drill focuses on fundamental skills like natural point of aim, trigger control, recoil management, and target transitions across various distances and shooting conditions, including strong and weak-hand-only exercises. It emphasizes tracking progress with scoring and shot timers.

Quick Summary

The Two Box Drill, developed by Joe Farewell, offers efficient firearm training with 100 rounds, focusing on natural point of aim, trigger control, recoil management, and target transitions. It includes specific drills for strong/weak-hand-only shooting and emphasizes progress tracking with scores and shot timers.

Chapters

  1. 00:25Introduction to the Two Box Drill
  2. 00:44Line Drill: Natural Point of Aim
  3. 01:17Eight Small Circles: Trigger Control
  4. 01:44Green Circles: Strong/Weak Hand Drills
  5. 02:07Light Brown Targets: Transitions (5 Yards)
  6. 02:49Hostage Taker Drill
  7. 03:00Recoil Control and Transition Drills
  8. 03:17Advanced Distance Drill
  9. 03:35Tracking Progress with Scores and Timers

Frequently Asked Questions

How can I train effectively with limited ammunition?

The Two Box Drill, designed by Joe Farewell, allows for comprehensive firearm training using only 100 rounds. It focuses on fundamental skills like natural point of aim, trigger control, recoil management, and target transitions, ensuring each shot contributes to skill development.

What are the key skills practiced in the Two Box Drill?

The Two Box Drill emphasizes natural point of aim, proper body indexing, trigger control, sight alignment, recoil management (including strong and weak-hand-only), and rapid target transitions. It also includes drills for accuracy at various distances.

How does the Two Box Drill help with recoil control?

The drill includes specific exercises for strong-hand-only and weak-hand-only shooting, forcing the shooter to manage recoil without the support of their dominant hand. It also incorporates drills at increasing distances that inherently challenge recoil management.

Why is using a shot timer important for this drill?

A shot timer is crucial for tracking progression and identifying areas for improvement. It accurately measures draw times, sight alignment, transition speed between targets, and split times (the time between shots), providing objective data for skill enhancement.

More Training & Techniques Videos You Might Like

More from Farewell Firearms Training

View all →