4-P course of fire
Moderators: pilkguns, Marcus, m1963, David Levene, Spencer
4-P course of fire
my daughter has shot several 3-P matches but shes never fired a 4-P...
just curious what the course of fire is...
thanks
just curious what the course of fire is...
thanks
Re: 4-P course of fire
Usually prone, sitting, kneeling and standing in that order. An equal number of shots in each position, 10-20 for indoor and up to 40 outdoors.
Re: 4-P course of fire
beye wrote:Usually prone, sitting, kneeling and standing in that order. An equal number of shots in each position, 10-20 for indoor and up to 40 outdoors.
prone, sitting, kneeling and standing in that order
thats what i was looking for!
thanks
Re: 4-P course of fire
My club has always shot it; Prone, Standing, Sitting, Kneeling.
Re: 4-P course of fire
Normally it is prone, standing, sitting, kneeling.
Re: 4-P course of fire
I think it depends on what rule book you are using for the match. For NRA 4-P, the usual order is prone, standing, sitting, kneeling.
Re: 4-P course of fire
Perhaps I'm overlooking it, but I cannot find in the NRA smallbore rule book where the order of positions is mandated. If this is so, the course is set by the match director and specified in the match program.
Re: 4-P course of fire
Here are the links I found. The rulebook appears to say, for four position indoor you can choose your order, yet for four position outdoor it specifies the order.
Page 17 & 18 of the smallbore rulebook (section 7.3 for conventional and 7.5 for metric) address this.
The rulebook says for conventional position indoor at 50' or 75', "10, 20 or 40 in each of the four positions." For conventional position outdoor at 50 yards it specifies, "10, 20, or 40 in each of the following positions: Prone, Sitting, Kneeling, Standing." (section 7.3)
The rulebook says for metric three position says, "10, 20, or 40 in each position: Prone, Standing, and Kneeling." (section 7.5).
http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q= ... Kg&cad=rja
The rulebook, to me, appears to conflict with the NRA score cards (both junior and open), which list the order as prone, standing, sitting, then kneeling.
http://compete.nra.org/sectional-score- ... grams.aspx
Since the rulebook and scorecards do not seem to agree, I don't think this is the final word on the matter.
Our club and the league that I shoot in (50' indoor) shoot prone, sitting, kneeling, then offhand.
Best,
Brian
Page 17 & 18 of the smallbore rulebook (section 7.3 for conventional and 7.5 for metric) address this.
The rulebook says for conventional position indoor at 50' or 75', "10, 20 or 40 in each of the four positions." For conventional position outdoor at 50 yards it specifies, "10, 20, or 40 in each of the following positions: Prone, Sitting, Kneeling, Standing." (section 7.3)
The rulebook says for metric three position says, "10, 20, or 40 in each position: Prone, Standing, and Kneeling." (section 7.5).
http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q= ... Kg&cad=rja
The rulebook, to me, appears to conflict with the NRA score cards (both junior and open), which list the order as prone, standing, sitting, then kneeling.
http://compete.nra.org/sectional-score- ... grams.aspx
Since the rulebook and scorecards do not seem to agree, I don't think this is the final word on the matter.
Our club and the league that I shoot in (50' indoor) shoot prone, sitting, kneeling, then offhand.
Best,
Brian
-
- Posts: 93
- Joined: Fri Aug 27, 2004 8:24 am
- Location: Rochester, NY
Re: 4-P course of fire
I was the range officer at the 4P sectional just a couple weeks ago, and this exact question came up. So, I went to the rulebook and came to the same conclusion you did - that it doesn't *actually* say what order to shoot them in, so I just followed the order of the score cards.
Re: 4-P course of fire
The Sectional Progams which come to the match director with the sectional awards set the order of fire. Prone, standing, sitting, kneeling.
Other match directors for approved matches are allowed to set the order as they wish, but the program must go through NRA approval.
Other match directors for approved matches are allowed to set the order as they wish, but the program must go through NRA approval.