Thursday, May 22, 2008

KRISS Super V on Tee Vee Last Night

Y'all watch the CSI franchise at all? My girlfriend does, ergo, so do I.

Last night the You Nork CSI was faced with an interesting problem: How could a body have two bullets in it when it only had one bullet hole?

The answer: The KRISS Super V. You see, it's recoil management system is so effective that it's very easy to put two bullets into one hole. During a fight. While holding up a bank.

Wow. I wonder if TDI knows this?

Hey, at least Hollywood's trying to keep up with technology.

7 comments:

John R said...

Yes, I did catch that one. CSI NY is getting almost as bad as CSI Miami with it's anti gun mythology.

John R said...

V hates it when I pause the TV to point out errors. This time it was: "Remember when we spoke to the TDI rep?, remember holding the .45 ACP carbine? That's what they are talking about".

Anonymous said...

... because the body is obviously not going to move from the start of the firing engagement until after the second bullet has entered the same exact hole the first one made without any deviation whatsoever.

I mean, hell, think of trying to score a shooting match with someone using a KRISS!

Rustmeister said...

LOL you betcha!

Bruce said...

The same show where they held up a S&W Sigma pistol and commented "High-end."

Anonymous said...

Kinda related, but not to the show:
My dad used to shoot for the US Army, was a shooting trainer, and a member of the US Shooting Team. He said he wasn't the best natural shot, but with tons of practice he was good enough to stay on the squad.

He and his friends have told countless stories of shooting competitions where (lying prone) the shooter would have to adjust one foot a bit in order to avoid putting multiple shots through the same hole in the target. If two rounds went through the same hold, the second was counted as a miss.

This was with US Army sniper rifles circa 1960. To prevent the problem they would work down one side of the 'V', then up the other side with 5 rounds, mostly by adjusting the angle of their back foot.

Rustmeister said...

That's good to know!