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Re: Questions about the shooting qualification....

Posted: Fri Dec 28, 2007 10:19 pm
by WildBill
Skiprr wrote:Nope; sequencing and timing are standardized.
Well you sure told me. :oops:
Next time I'll stick with something I know!!!
My advice about shooting qualification is to do what the CHL instructor tells you! ;-)

Re: Questions about the shooting qualification....

Posted: Fri Dec 28, 2007 10:34 pm
by Skiprr
WildBill wrote:Well you sure told me.
I did no such thing. I couldn't even figure out how to post the dang table... :roll:

Bottom line is that, with even modest handgun familiarity, passing the test is a piece o' cake.

Let's try this:

Image

Most often, the ranges don't have turning targets. So the instructor just uses commands or a whistle with approximate timing.

Re: Questions about the shooting qualification....

Posted: Sat Dec 29, 2007 8:26 am
by LarryH
That's interesting. Our instructor didn't say anything (that I remember) about how many seconds we had after the whistle to get the shots off. He just said "one shot per whistle" or "two shots after the first whistle, then three shots after the second" or words to that effect.

Re: Questions about the shooting qualification....

Posted: Sat Dec 29, 2007 10:57 am
by txinvestigator
LarryH wrote:That's interesting. Our instructor didn't say anything (that I remember) about how many seconds we had after the whistle to get the shots off. He just said "one shot per whistle" or "two shots after the first whistle, then three shots after the second" or words to that effect.
I have seen instructors not time the shots, but it is required and is part of the course of fire.

The law does not mention how many you load per string, either. If you had a 50 round magazine you could load 50. However, due to the large variance in the number of rounds magazines hold, and the fact that there are many 5 shot revolvers, DPS does it 5 rounds at a time, except for the 2 shot exercise, where you load 6 shots, then 4 for the next string. They compensate for any 5 shot revolvers then. Most instructors follow suit because it makes sense.

Also, since most of the course is segmented into 5 shots, loading only 5 at a time prevents people from firing too many. ;)

Re: Questions about the shooting qualification....

Posted: Sat Dec 29, 2007 11:07 am
by flb_78
I had to rent a semi-auto for my course from the gun shop. I didn't have 1 at the time. still shot a 248 with a gun I had never held before.

Re: Questions about the shooting qualification....

Posted: Sat Jan 05, 2008 12:09 pm
by stormbringerr
seamusTX wrote:
seeker_two wrote:2. If you start the shooting qualification with an auto (9mm) and that auto breaks down,
Get a SIG and you won't have to worry about that. :reddevil

Seriously, y'all worry too much.

- Jim
ha,+1 couldn't have said it any better myself. :iagree: