gwpercle
Member
I wish I could put 30 shots into one hole, I would be on the Olympic Shooting team for sure !
Not at typical qualification distances with a High Standard Citation, an S&W Model 41 or an Izh 35.50 rounds in one hole?? That would be quite a feat.
That's very funny. Political correctness st the range. The most popular target at my range is the "Islamic Terrorist".They don't want "People targets" that may cause problems and give them a bad image.
50 rounds in one hole?? That would be quite a feat. Was the shooter Jerry Miculek? I think the instructor was pulling your leg..![]()
50 rounds in one hole?? That would be quite a feat. Was the shooter Jerry Miculek? I think the instructor was pulling your leg..![]()
No it's not the law. There's nothing in IL law or the CCW ad rules that says there has to be 21 separate holes. If you shoot a ragged hole with all 30 rds there's nothing in the law that says that's not a passing score.Yes it is BS but that's the law ..
Took the Utah conceal carry class over the weekend and found out something very interesting about the Illinois Conceal Carry Qualifying ..
so if you key hole all 30 shots in a 3 inch circle you would fail ..
If you "keyhole" 30 shots it is highly unlikely you will then
have a single hole. But you might have a bullet or barrel
problem !!!
Chuck
I call BS on this.
I could certainly see this happening if the instructor wants to penalize someone with the "wrong attitude", not showing proper safety skills, etc. but couldn't otherwise fail them under the rules.
Or you could just do this:
No it's not the law. There's nothing in IL law or the CCW ad rules that says there has to be 21 separate holes. If you shoot a ragged hole with all 30 rds there's nothing in the law that says that's not a passing score.
In your scenario all that says is the instructor really doesn't know all that much about scoring targets.
I shot many years bullseye matches and combat and pistol team in the military. Anyone who scored targets like you described wouldn't be doing range work very long.
That's one problem with IL's CCW program. To be an instructor all a person has to do is pay the $300 and submit whatever teaching course they want to teach. Nothing says they have to know diddly squat about range scoring or even putting together a lesson plan. There have been some really sorry instructors approved who have no business teaching anyone anything about shooting. They've read all the grocery store gun rags, bought a few guns themselves, but they're totally inept at teaching a quality course. Before taking anyone as an instructor remember one thing - if you're involved in a shooting situation that person you hired as an instructor to qualify you is going to be on the stand in your civil case. In the OP's case that instructor is definitely not a person you want on your side when you're facing a multi-million dollar suit.
That sounds like the kind of instructor who says if you're in a shooting situation that you're better off spreading your shots around to cause more damage. It just shows that instructor is a computer commando who has never been in anything more dangerous in his life than falling out of his high chair and landing on his head when he was a baby.