- Banned
- #1
Well, this evening I participated in my first ever "competitive" shoot. A local indoor range did a bowling pin shoot. They had tables set up with five pins lined up and how close they were set to the rear edge of the table was determined by the caliber of gun being shot. 45's were near the front, with 9's in the middle, and 22's in the rear. They had a timing device that measured from the buzzer to your last shot. The buzzer started after you were in the low ready position and indicated you were ready to begin. You got the best of three attempts.
I fired my first three attempts with my M9-A1 and the second three with a borrowed 9mm XDM. My best time with the Steyr was just over 10 seconds and just over 13 seconds with the XDM.
The best time that night was a guy shooting a 1911. Five pins, five shots, just over four seconds. :cheers:
It was a lot harder than I expected and I didn't do as well as I'd hoped. I had one attempt that was over thirty seconds and another over forty. If the pin falls down but doesn't fall off, you have to keep shooting until if falls off and a few times, it just didn't want to fall off.
All in all, I had a lot of fun and look forward to doing it the next time it's offered.
I fired my first three attempts with my M9-A1 and the second three with a borrowed 9mm XDM. My best time with the Steyr was just over 10 seconds and just over 13 seconds with the XDM.
The best time that night was a guy shooting a 1911. Five pins, five shots, just over four seconds. :cheers:
It was a lot harder than I expected and I didn't do as well as I'd hoped. I had one attempt that was over thirty seconds and another over forty. If the pin falls down but doesn't fall off, you have to keep shooting until if falls off and a few times, it just didn't want to fall off.
All in all, I had a lot of fun and look forward to doing it the next time it's offered.