@@Esp1IPSCSportShooter Wow, that would be awesome. I mean. I personally do 30-45 minutes session. There's always trigger control with both hands and then srong and weak hand only. Slide lock reloads, target transitions. And if I got little bit more time I try to sneak in some malfunctions. Same goes for concealed carry dryfire session. But those are great! It's harder to meet the par time with safety/retention on holster, but not impossible.
That does really depend on factors like task given for the patrol, transportation method and terrain You are doing Your patrol in. It can be 12 hours but also a week. At least that is what You might encounter in military. I can't talk for LE. I've never been a cop.
I tried to add a reload in between targets to compensate that and it worked great tbh, you can also do a transition from primary to secondary, works great too
When using double action, do you pull trigger, pause and then rack the slide and un-pause and pull the trigger or do you simply pull trigger in double action mode all the way every time?
The gun has no magazine in it, and it's staged on a table or surface in front of you. Keep your palms on the surface, and when you hear the beep you can pick up the gun, load it with the empty or training magazine, and fire one shot at the target.
It looks like this range has much more versatile backstops than our metal bullet traps. Or do you have to bring in significant tires/sandbags/mulch to construct intermediate backstops?
I was wondering the same, but I think the tought is that you draw, aim and dryfire at each beep. As in this is not an instructural video, but a training tool.