Speedo66
Member
So every year a retired officer must requalify to the current marksmanship standards in their state for active officers to keep their HR218 ability for permitless carry in all states and US territories.
Where I reside the standards include timed fire at distances from 4 feet, where you draw and fire from the hip, to one handed shooting, weak and strong arm, changing magazines, chest and head shots, and shooting accurately at 50 feet, all timed In seconds.
It’s not bullseye shooting, but rather just getting all your shots in an inner silhouette on the target, shots outside don’t count. The people conducting the training required you to qualify with both semi-auto and revolver if you wanted your card to indicate you could carry both. I seemed to shoot much better, tighter groups, with my 4” K frame than I did with my Glock 26.
While I had some flyers, I managed to keep them all in the inner target area, so good for another year. They had us tape over the holes after every stage to make it easier for them to score, but you can get an idea where the holes were.
Where I reside the standards include timed fire at distances from 4 feet, where you draw and fire from the hip, to one handed shooting, weak and strong arm, changing magazines, chest and head shots, and shooting accurately at 50 feet, all timed In seconds.
It’s not bullseye shooting, but rather just getting all your shots in an inner silhouette on the target, shots outside don’t count. The people conducting the training required you to qualify with both semi-auto and revolver if you wanted your card to indicate you could carry both. I seemed to shoot much better, tighter groups, with my 4” K frame than I did with my Glock 26.
While I had some flyers, I managed to keep them all in the inner target area, so good for another year. They had us tape over the holes after every stage to make it easier for them to score, but you can get an idea where the holes were.