Best Shooting Drill | Marine Carbine Qualification Drill | Shooting Techniques | Tactical Rifleman

Published on August 19, 2016
Duration: 10:39

This video details a challenging 50-round Marine-style carbine qualification drill designed to test speed, accuracy, and weapon manipulation under stress. It incorporates static shooting from various positions, dynamic movement, failure drills, and speed reloads, culminating in a pistol transition upon bolt lock. The drill emphasizes scoring zones on a target and requires a high level of proficiency to pass.

Quick Summary

The Marine Carbine Qualification Drill is a 50-round test featuring static positions, movement, speed reloads, and failure drills. Scoring uses a target with zones worth 1-2 points, requiring a score of 80+ for advanced training.

Chapters

  1. 00:00Drill Introduction & Scoring
  2. 02:0650-Yard Static Engagements
  3. 02:31Stress & Movement Drills (50-25 Yards)
  4. 02:58Limited Exposure Shot (25 Yards)
  5. 03:30Advancing Fire (25-15 Yards)
  6. 04:15Hammer Pairs at 15 Yards
  7. 04:44Failure Drills on the Move
  8. 06:57Multi-Target Course of Fire
  9. 09:21Box Drill & Pistol Transition

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the key components of the Marine Carbine Qualification Drill shown?

This drill includes static shooting from standing, kneeling, and prone positions, sprinting to simulate stress, shooting on the move, failure drills (two to chest, one to head), speed reloads, and a final pistol transition upon bolt lock.

How is the Marine Carbine Qualification Drill scored?

The drill uses a target with scoring zones: a bowling pin outline (1 point), chest boxes (2 points), and a head triangle (2 points). A score of 80 or higher is typically required for progression to live shoot-house training.

What is the purpose of the stress inoculation in this carbine drill?

Stress inoculation is achieved by having shooters sprint between firing lines, elevating their heart rate before engaging targets. This simulates the physical and mental stress experienced in real-world combat scenarios.

What are 'hammer pairs' in the context of carbine shooting?

'Hammer pairs' refer to accelerated pairs of shots fired as quickly as possible while maintaining a good sight picture. The goal is to drive the red dot sight to the high center chest and fire rapidly.

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