NRA conventional pistol competition consists of firing slow, timed, and rapid fire. This is done at 50 and 25 yards outdoors and almost exclusively at 50 feet indoors. Generally an outdoor match will consist of 20 shots, slow fire at 50 yards (2 10-shot strings, 10 minutes per string), 20 shots, timed fire at 25 yards (4 5-shot strings, 20 seconds per string), 20 shots, rapid fire at 25 yards (4 5-shot strings, 10 seconds per string), and the National Match Course (10-shots, slow fire at 50 yards, 10-shots timed fire, and 10-shots rapid fire). This match consists of 90-shots for a possible aggregate total of 900 points. For a 2700 aggregate this match is fired once with each gun; .22 caliber rimfire, centerfire, and .45 caliber. Many match programs call for only one or two guns, that is a 900 or 1800 aggregate.Pay a visit to the Encyclopedia today. Be sure to download the Army Marksmanship Unit Training Guide (PDF), linked on the homepage.
Most indoor tournaments are fired with .22 caliber rimfire only for a 900 aggregate. However, some indoor matches use all guns for a complete 2700 aggregate.
Friday, October 9, 2009
The Encyclopedia of Bullseye Pistol
The Encyclopedia of Bullseye Pistol is an online resource dedicated to the sport and discipline of Bullseye Pistol Competition. Bullseye Pistol is a formal, highly technical approach to shooting. It is shot one-handed, unlike more modern combat-oriented training and competition. The course of fire is described in the NRA manual:
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