Going Distinguished with a handgun through the CMP or NRA Distinguished Revolver Program is national honor and the envy of thousands of other shooters. If you choose to take up this challenge, good luck to you. You will need it. There will be frustration and disappointment along the way. During my journey of earning my Distinguished Rifleman's Badge I won and lost Excellent in Competition Matches by only one 'X'. Hold hard, hang tough, and never, ever, ever, ever give up.
Listed below is a copied post from the Bullseye-L Forum you might find interesting.
Bullseye-L Forum
Distinguished Revolver
I am not one to gloat nor have any desire to write about my own accomplishments. But, I happily learned that I earned my Distinguished Revolver badge this year!!! Started shooting the revolver in April, 2011 and earned 6 points at the Bristol Regional that year shooting a 268. This year I won the Bristol Regional with a 281, shot 3rd at Perry with a 271 and won the Indiana state match with a 276. Shooting the revolver matches is very rewarding. I wish the NRA would offer additional rewards for those, who are already distinguished, to keep the participation and interest up.
I purchased a nearly new Smith 14-4 last year for this purpose. I followed Jerry Miculek's action job video, KC Crawford tuned a mainspring, switched to a 15# rebound spring and had Hamilton Bowen ream the cylinder throats to .359 - .3595". The gun would put 10 shots into 2 - 2 1/2" at 50 yards. The load was Zero's 158gr. SWC, 2.7gr. Bullseye, Winchester or Federal small pistol primers and mixed brass. The only external modification was to use Hogue's finger groove rubber grips.
I've mentioned it in other posts but I shoot slow fire SA and sustained fire DA. I really believe if folks would practice DA, using a gun with a fairly smooth action, they would find greater consistency than shooting SA at 25 yards.
The K38 is a perfect choice for the revolver "leg" matches. Just make sure you don't make any mods to your revolver (besides maybe a trigger/action job and grips). Experiment to see (for the 50 yd. slow fire phase) which chamber is the most accurate, and which 158 gr load it likes the most. That will take some time and ammo. The 158 load is not the most accurate and different loads will give different group sizes. And practice double-action for the timed and rapid fire phase... sounds difficult, but it's fairly easy to master. PPC shooters that win consistently use DA even at 50 yds.
For information on the NRA Distinguished Revolver Program, go to the NRA Competitions web site.
NRA Competitive Shooting Programs|Distinguished Revolver Program
For information on the Distinguished Pistol Shot badge, go to the Civilian Marksmanship Program web site.
Civilian Marksmanship Program |