I found a copy of the CHL Course of Fire on a web site but need some clarification. When it says "shoot 1 shot every 2sec 5 times", is that literally Bang 1001,1002, Bang 1001, 1002....or just 5 shots within 10sec?
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Thanks,
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While there is a curriculum to follow by the DPS, your instructor will advise you prior to each course of fire, what you will fire, how often, etc.TGIF wrote:or just 5 shots within 10sec?
This...Teamless wrote:While there is a curriculum to follow by the DPS, your instructor will advise you prior to each course of fire, what you will fire, how often, etc.TGIF wrote:or just 5 shots within 10sec?
Some say "on the whistle shoot 3 shots", or 1 shot per whistle, etc.
i took the course in december and IIRC, we took 20 shots at 9 feet, 20 shots at 21 feet, and 10 shots at 45 feet.RoyGBiv wrote:This...Teamless wrote:While there is a curriculum to follow by the DPS, your instructor will advise you prior to each course of fire, what you will fire, how often, etc.TGIF wrote:or just 5 shots within 10sec?
Some say "on the whistle shoot 3 shots", or 1 shot per whistle, etc.
Making sure you listen to the instructors directions was actually more difficult (not very, but more..) than actually hitting the target.
... You should really not sweat the proficiency test.. If you have had some minimal practice and can reliably hit the center of mass on a (rather large) target just a few feet away (across your bedroom, basically), you will not have any trouble with the proficiency. It's 40 shots from relatively close range... then 10 shots from about 20 feet (IIRC). If you hit ~85% of the close up shots, you can miss ALL of the last 10 and still pass... Two people in my most recent class were literally shaking on the firing line and neither one had any trouble passing...
Take a deep breath... Go to the range a few times... Take a basic handgun class..
Here is a link to the course of fire for CHL proficiency test specfied in the Texas Administrative Code (i.e. the rules adopted by the DPS to implement law, in this case, the CHL statutes). I presume this is the "official" course of fire.TGIF wrote:Howdy,
I found a copy of the CHL Course of Fire on a web site but need some clarification. When it says "shoot 1 shot every 2sec 5 times", is that literally Bang 1001,1002, Bang 1001, 1002....or just 5 shots within 10sec?![]()
Thanks,
Correct... My numbers were off by some..rmr1923 wrote: i took the course in december and IIRC, we took 20 shots at 9 feet, 20 shots at 21 feet, and 10 shots at 45 feet.
My instructor said we just had to have the shots off before time was up; however, he counted out loud for us to help timing... the 2 other guys in the class didn't realize how long 10 seconds really is to get 5 shots off... being a gun nut and avid shooter, I realized it was a lot of time, but welcomed the out-loud counting and followed it just to improve my score... I was so mad-- I got all excited on the last shot that I was going to get a perfect score, then threw one into the 7 ring... (insert string of curse words here!!!)TGIF wrote:Howdy,
I found a copy of the CHL Course of Fire on a web site but need some clarification. When it says "shoot 1 shot every 2sec 5 times", is that literally Bang 1001,1002, Bang 1001, 1002....or just 5 shots within 10sec?![]()
Thanks,
sjfcontrol wrote:just to answer the original question-- it's not "one shot every two seconds five times", it's "one shot IN two seconds, five times. The instructor will say "Ready? -- FIRE!", you'll then have two seconds to take the shot. The instructor will then do it again with "Ready? -- FIRE!" and you'll have another two seconds for the second round, etc.
That is NOT correct. The instructor may use different commands or give different instructions, but the course of fire must be same.TGIF wrote:Sounds like it basically depends on the instructors interpretation of and instructions for the CoF.
RoyGBiv wrote:This...Teamless wrote:While there is a curriculum to follow by the DPS, your instructor will advise you prior to each course of fire, what you will fire, how often, etc.TGIF wrote:or just 5 shots within 10sec?
Some say "on the whistle shoot 3 shots", or 1 shot per whistle, etc.
Making sure you listen to the instructors directions was actually more difficult (not very, but more..) than actually hitting the target.
... You should really not sweat the proficiency test.. If you have had some minimal practice and can reliably hit the center of mass on a (rather large) target just a few feet away (across your bedroom, basically), you will not have any trouble with the proficiency. It's 40 shots from relatively close range... then 10 shots from about 20 feet (IIRC). If you hit ~85% of the close up shots, you can miss ALL of the last 10 and still pass... Two people in my most recent class were literally shaking on the firing line and neither one had any trouble passing...
Take a deep breath... Go to the range a few times... Take a basic handgun class..