The GBRS Group cadre attempts the U.S. Air Marshal pistol qualification course, revealing its extreme difficulty and the gap between flat-range training and concealed carry realities. Even experienced shooters struggled with tight par times across seven dynamic stages, highlighting the critical need for consistent performance under pressure, efficient reloads, and accurate shooting from concealment. The experience humbled the team, emphasizing the importance of regular concealed carry drills and gear optimization.
This video details the rigorous Las Vegas SWAT pistol qualification course, emphasizing speed, accuracy, and tactical proficiency. It breaks down each stage, from close-range drills to longer distances and failure drills, highlighting the importance of weapon manipulation like speed reloads. The course requires a minimum score of 225 out of 250 points, testing shooters under pressure.
This video breaks down the FBI Pistol Qualification Course, detailing stages from 3 to 25 yards with specific round counts and time limits. It highlights the importance of speed, accuracy, and consistency under pressure, demonstrating drills like strong/support hand-only firing and positional transitions. The GBRS team emphasizes the course as a benchmark for shooter proficiency and discusses the benefits of modern optics.
This YouTube video features Chili attempting the Georgia Police Firearms Qualification Test. The description humorously suggests the attempt does not go well ("It ain't good"). The video likely showcases the challenges and stress of official law enforcement firearm proficiency standards. It also includes sponsored content for "Renewal Rain" and "1st Phorm" products, as well as a Patreon link and a store for "Three of Seven Project."
This video delves into historical FBI pistol training by recreating and shooting the FBI's Revolver Qualification Course from the early 1980s and their first semi-automatic Pistol Qualification Course from the late 1980s. The content focuses on the evolution of FBI firearm standards and offers a challenge to viewers to see if they can match or exceed the performance required in these past qualification tests. It highlights the shift from revolvers to semi-automatic pistols in law enforcement training.
The OGA Qualification Test is a 30-round pistol drill at 7 meters, emphasizing accuracy on the 'High A-Zone' over minimum scoring. It includes timed sequences like single shots from a draw, double taps from low ready, and complex drills involving reloads and target transitions. Tactical Rifleman trains to a higher standard than the basic qualification, focusing on speed, recoil management, and precision under pressure.
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