A belated congratulation Brian. My takeaway from this is that you show how a competent shooter can respond in a focused, almost calm manner while still being fast and accurate enough to deal with a threat. You also show the FBI's qualification standard is credible. Thanks!
Great drill, I have to qualify next weekend. I think I'm going to use this at the range for the next week and track improvement. Thank you for sharing this.
Holy cow! I now realize that when I qualified for my California CCW, this is what we did in our shooting, including head shots! We shot 50 rounds, and I hit 48 on the qualifier round.
Mr. Hill, I'm not familiar with that model Sig, except I know it's a DA and I think it is metal, there was very little recoil. With DA pistols don't you still have to rack the slide with the hand or slide release/lock ? I didn't see you rack/charge the slide at all.
Here's a drill to add it's called determined burn Stand with your back towards the target take 5 steps away with your hands up Then turn clear garment and shoot 5 times into a 3 by 5 card at the head box
"all stages shot with both hands from here on out"....at first I kept waiting for him to shoot with the left hand lol. Then I realized it means 2 handed
djoliver7 the string of fire is set at certain number of rounds, if you miss count there is no make up round, just a miss. I have observed many shooters not set a magazine completely, and not have a round in the chamber. This is an administrative detail of the drill, like shoot 4, slide lock reload, and shoot four rounds in 8 seconds. If you add a malfunction drill, you will probably not make the time.
If he has to press check every single time it means he doesn't have confidence that his firearm will function correctly. If I had to press check every time I racked the slide Id throw away that firearm and buy one that works
Interesting, good shooting but the iWB ? No thanks. Did the FBI stop using facing targets ? I went to Artisa New Mexico FLETCE Training academy for advanced weapons training including the stress course of fire. 3 yard 3 seconds 1 round, 5 yard line 5 seconds two rounds. 7 yard line 3 rounds 10 seconds, 25 yard 3 rounds 15 seconds. Course of fire included week hand as well as a night fire. We fired at least 1,000 rounds a day for four days, day 5 was qualification. If you did not qualify you were instructed to pack your bags and return back to your duty station. If you qualified you had three more weeks of intense training. It was all pass or pack your bags. It was the best fire arms training that I have ever received to include military training. We also received weapons retention training after that it was game on ANY instructor could attempt to take your dummy side arm. One was taken afterwards we traveled in packs of three , there was 20 of us. A Fed Leo Instructor made the mistake of trying to take a side off of one in the chow hall. We heard GUN regardless where we were we attacked the Instructor and took him to the ground and cuffed him . We used arm bars joint locks and pressure points, The Instructor said out of role our reply was fuck you and cuffed his ankles together. We then heard Okay Animals out of role it was our Lead Instructor a GS -13. One of the Lieutenants debriefed him of the attack and he couldn't help but laugh. Afterwards the other Fed Agencies got the message in the dining room and they left us alone. WEAPONS RETENTION IS CRITICAL.
I’m not 100% sure but most LE qualifications will DQ you if any rounds are outside the silhouette and make you shoot it again. Good shooting either way.
The FBI allows an 80% hit rate to pass, and instructor is 90% out of 60 shots. They have since revised this qualification to 50 rounds, which means you could miss 10 shots and still pass. This exceptionally high relative to LEO qualifications. Thanks
Brian Hill I know when we qualify we have to use a TQ-19 target and it’s 50 rounds for day and night qualifications. We cannot have any outside the scoring area (milk bottle shape inside the silhouette) or they count as a miss. Anything off the silhouette will be an auto-fail. We must get an 80% or higher to pass for both. It’s similar to the FBI one but the max time we have for a reload and shoot from cover is 10 seconds. I was just asking if that is the same for the FBI qualifications since for us a miss is an automatic failure.
Good shooting but watching you use what looks like a Glock, IWB/appendix, makes me nervous. I appreciate you were careful when reholstering but it’s not something I’d do w/this style weapon. I did carry my off duty .38 like that for years but it had a heavy trigger.
Old Cop I understand your hesitation. I am shooting a Sig P226, allowing me to block the hammer with my thumb and adding an extra layer of safety to holstering the weapon.
If you watch closely how he holsters his weapon by pressing hips out and finger off the trigger he probably more safe then a lot of guys put guns back at the 4 or 5 o’clock position
That would take the dingle out of your dangle getting shot in that spot. To each his own, just heard of folks blasting their junk for me to carry like that but, thats me.
gregory mceaddy The course of fire as specified by the FBI is an empty gun reload. 8 seconds to draw and fire 4 and reload 4. Please send me a video of you performing a tactical reload in that time period, because it’s a tough standard to meet.
A belated congratulation Brian. My takeaway from this is that you show how a competent shooter can respond in a focused, almost calm manner while still being fast and accurate enough to deal with a threat. You also show the FBI's qualification standard is credible. Thanks!
Great drill, I have to qualify next weekend. I think I'm going to use this at the range for the next week and track improvement. Thank you for sharing this.
I've seen John's video. Great for you to take up the challenge! Good job!
I will definitely be adding this to my training. THX
Rule #1, never leave a mag behind 😂
Holy cow! I now realize that when I qualified for my California CCW, this is what we did in our shooting, including head shots! We shot 50 rounds, and I hit 48 on the qualifier round.
Mr. Hill, I'm not familiar with that model Sig, except I know it's a DA and I think it is metal, there was very little recoil. With DA pistols don't you still have to rack the slide with the hand or slide release/lock ? I didn't see you rack/charge the slide at all.
Thank you for sharing.
OMG...look how much the range has changed......!!!
Excellent Coach Brian!!
Thank you!
Looks fairly easy. Can't wait to try it, tomorrow. Good job, by the way. This makes me 39 drills, in my "drill book", now. lol
Here's a drill to add it's called determined burn Stand with your back towards the target take 5 steps away with your hands up Then turn clear garment and shoot 5 times into a 3 by 5 card at the head box
"all stages shot with both hands from here on out"....at first I kept waiting for him to shoot with the left hand lol. Then I realized it means 2 handed
Yeah, there was one down in the 5, lower left
The course has changed since then, there were far too many gimmes from the 3, 5, and 7 yard line
Press checking after racking a round seems unnecessary.
djoliver7 the string of fire is set at certain number of rounds, if you miss count there is no make up round, just a miss. I have observed many shooters not set a magazine completely, and not have a round in the chamber. This is an administrative detail of the drill, like shoot 4, slide lock reload, and shoot four rounds in 8 seconds. If you add a malfunction drill, you will probably not make the time.
And sweeping!
If he has to press check every single time it means he doesn't have confidence that his firearm will function correctly. If I had to press check every time I racked the slide Id throw away that firearm and buy one that works
@@jonathanwright4160 Crack me up. It's a check, not a fix to a problem.
Were you using a sig p229?
David Wilson P226 Legion
Well done
What type of gun and caliber were you shooting?
I shot this drill with a Sig P226 and CCI blazer 9mm ammo.
The recoil looked like a 22
Mike Lawrence that’s a p226 for you
Good shooting Brian! I like your videos!
Interesting, good shooting but the iWB ?
No thanks.
Did the FBI stop using facing targets ?
I went to Artisa New Mexico FLETCE Training academy for advanced weapons training including the stress course of fire.
3 yard 3 seconds 1 round, 5 yard line 5 seconds two rounds. 7 yard line 3 rounds 10 seconds, 25 yard 3 rounds 15 seconds. Course of fire included week hand as well as a night fire.
We fired at least 1,000 rounds a day for four days, day 5 was qualification.
If you did not qualify you were instructed to pack your bags and return back to your duty station. If you qualified you had three more weeks of intense training.
It was all pass or pack your bags.
It was the best fire arms training that I have ever received to include military training. We also received weapons retention training after that it was game on ANY instructor could attempt to take your dummy side arm. One was taken afterwards we traveled in packs of three , there was 20 of us. A Fed Leo Instructor made the mistake of trying to take a side off of one in the chow hall. We heard GUN regardless where we were we attacked the Instructor and took him to the ground and cuffed him .
We used arm bars joint locks and pressure points, The Instructor said out of role our reply was fuck you and cuffed his ankles together.
We then heard Okay Animals out of role
it was our Lead Instructor a GS -13.
One of the Lieutenants debriefed him of the attack and he couldn't help but laugh.
Afterwards the other Fed Agencies got the message in the dining room and they left us alone.
WEAPONS RETENTION IS CRITICAL.
Nice shootin' Tex
Sig 226??
Distance is never mentioned.
Still great shooting!
I’m not 100% sure but most LE qualifications will DQ you if any rounds are outside the silhouette and make you shoot it again. Good shooting either way.
The FBI allows an 80% hit rate to pass, and instructor is 90% out of 60 shots. They have since revised this qualification to 50 rounds, which means you could miss 10 shots and still pass. This exceptionally high relative to LEO qualifications. Thanks
Brian Hill I know when we qualify we have to use a TQ-19 target and it’s 50 rounds for day and night qualifications. We cannot have any outside the scoring area (milk bottle shape inside the silhouette) or they count as a miss. Anything off the silhouette will be an auto-fail. We must get an 80% or higher to pass for both. It’s similar to the FBI one but the max time we have for a reload and shoot from cover is 10 seconds. I was just asking if that is the same for the FBI qualifications since for us a miss is an automatic failure.
TRIBE LLC sounds like a good test.
Good shooting but watching you use what looks like a Glock, IWB/appendix, makes me nervous. I appreciate you were careful when reholstering but it’s not something I’d do w/this style weapon. I did carry my off duty .38 like that for years but it had a heavy trigger.
Old Cop I understand your hesitation. I am shooting a Sig P226, allowing me to block the hammer with my thumb and adding an extra layer of safety to holstering the weapon.
Brian that’s a good gun to qualify with
You do not get time to readjust on this gual.it's run and gun
My contract is better
Carlo Caguioa Your “contract”?
That barrel is pointing a bit to close to the johnson for me.
macrif that's what every person ignorant of appendix carry says. If I had a nickel........
If you watch closely how he holsters his weapon by pressing hips out and finger off the trigger he probably more safe then a lot of guys put guns back at the 4 or 5 o’clock position
I'm with you on appendix carry and preety sure Timothy Phonisay would agree.
He also shoots a double action Sig. Brian is a professional. Train with someone like him if you go AIWB. Holster and techniques are the key.
That would take the dingle out of your dangle getting shot in that spot. To each his own, just heard of folks blasting their junk for me to carry like that but, thats me.
You need work on the tactical reload.i.e combat
gregory mceaddy The course of fire as specified by the FBI is an empty gun reload. 8 seconds to draw and fire 4 and reload 4. Please send me a video of you performing a tactical reload in that time period, because it’s a tough standard to meet.
I would never carry a gun like that.