Brokos' Walk Off Drill with Carbine

Published on September 13, 2021
Duration: 1:12

This video demonstrates the 'Walk Off Drill' for carbine proficiency, emphasizing accuracy under time pressure at 50 meters. The drill requires five shots standing, a reload, and five shots prone, with any miss resulting in disqualification. It's designed to test a shooter's ability to drive the gun effectively in different positions.

Quick Summary

The 'Walk Off Drill' is a carbine training exercise at 50 meters focusing on accuracy from standing and prone positions. It requires five shots standing, a reload, and five shots prone without any misses. Failure to hit the target results in disqualification, testing a shooter's ability to 'drive the gun' under pressure.

Chapters

  1. 00:00Introduction to the Walk Off Drill
  2. 00:05Drill Objective: Driving the Gun
  3. 00:08Distance and Target Setup (50 Meters)
  4. 00:14Drill Sequence: Standing, Reload, Prone
  5. 00:16The 'You Can't Miss' Rule
  6. 00:18Origin of the 'Walk Off Drill' Name
  7. 00:23Missed Shot Consequence
  8. 00:35Drill Execution Example
  9. 00:57Handling a 'Mag Hiccup'
  10. 01:00Drill Conclusion and Philosophy

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the 'Walk Off Drill' for carbine training?

The 'Walk Off Drill' is a timed carbine exercise at 50 meters requiring five accurate shots standing, a reload, and five accurate shots prone. Any miss disqualifies the shooter, emphasizing precision and speed under pressure.

What are the key components of the 'Walk Off Drill'?

The drill involves engaging an 8x11 inch steel target at 50 meters. Shooters must make five hits standing, perform a reload, and then make five hits prone. The core rule is that you cannot miss any shots to pass.

What is the purpose of the 'Walk Off Drill'?

The drill's purpose is to test and improve a shooter's ability to 'drive the gun' effectively and accurately from both standing and prone positions under time constraints, simulating demanding tactical scenarios.

How is the 'Walk Off Drill' scored or determined as a pass/fail?

The drill is a pass/fail based on accuracy. A shooter must successfully land all ten shots (five standing, five prone) on the target. Missing even one shot means they 'walk off' and do not pass.

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