No BS folks, we can actually learn something from this. Look at the glock when in rapid fire. The slide had not reset, the barrel was out of alignment. There is no way the follow up shot was going to be as accurate as the first. Just not mechanically possible. We could learn to time our shots, not just see how fast we can squeeze the triger.It seems from watcing this that a lot of the rapid fire/accuracy problems we have are as much mechanincal as human. WE are out running the gun, just like you could jam an old manual typewriter if you typed too fast. I'll leave it to the experts like picus to say what to do about this, but it does seem an eye opener, or I could be wrong.
FQ13