[video=youtube;Eb4RPY9eekQ]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Eb4RPY9eekQ&feature=relmfu[/video] These fellas pretty much cover all the bases in their tests. A F-150 will sit much higher than a low-rider Olds though, so I don't know if the drive-by test was entirely accurate. But, all in all the video was a fair assessment of ghetto marksmanship as seen in rap videos and Hollywood movies. _
Hey there , Donald , Why do American Hilly Billy Gun Boys want to fight ? Have you told them you lose every war ?
Nothing scares me more than Rednecks shooting at Targets in an open field. Notice how they dodge all the return Bullets; boy are they lighting quick. I guess those Ghetto Thugs will be in big trouble if they’re standing around smoking a Joint or a 40 with their backs turned. Great Video … I sure was entertained.
Here are Mythbusters evaluation of the ghetto / movie shooting styles (sorry about the commercials) http://dsc.discovery.com/videos/mythbusters-two-guns-two-targets-minimyth.html Same results, with a bunch more scientific method.
Someone help me verify this, please. Watch the OP video, the last :30 seconds, where the old guy says "...you concentrate on your target and hit it." If I'm counting correctly, he fires about 31 shots. I hear about 14 or 15 "plinks" on the metal target he's shooting at - which means he's at about 50% accuracy, if I'm counting correctly. Anyone?
To make the ghetto drive-by test more accurate, they should have driven a $400 car with $3,000 rims on it.
Obviously, trying to look cool does not do much for your life expectancy in a fire fight. In a horizontal hold, muzzle flip makes a big difference in where the bullet will strike. Hanging out of a pickup truck is a little unrealistic. In the first place, you cannot get a good firing position. Yhis is still true even in a more suitable vehicle, like a 1964 Impala. The two-gun firing scenario is also laughable because there is no way you can aim both weapons. At least in the extended magazine scenario, they made some effort to take a proper firing stance and aim the weapon, but got carried away trying to fire off the full magazine, with predictable loss of accuracy. Fiting my revolver, single action, I could probably get off about half as many rounds with about three times the accuracy. That kind of matters in an OH BLEEP! scenario.