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by Soccerdad1995
Fri Apr 13, 2018 5:22 pm
Forum: Instructors' Corner
Topic: Lever-action pistol
Replies: 46
Views: 17425

Re: Lever-action pistol

warnmar10 wrote:
Soccerdad1995 wrote:I think we have beaten this horse pretty much to death.

...
You're not from around here are you.
:lol::
by Soccerdad1995
Fri Apr 13, 2018 1:37 pm
Forum: Instructors' Corner
Topic: Lever-action pistol
Replies: 46
Views: 17425

Re: Lever-action pistol

I think we have beaten this horse pretty much to death.

The consensus answer seems to be that any pistol can be used for the LTC qualification, including a lever action pistol, AR pistol, etc. And the consensus also seems to be that an instructor is free to add any other requirements they choose to the LTC qualification including requiring students to shoot one handed, fire over their shoulder, stand on their head, or fire blindfolded.

The takeaway seems to be that if in doubt, ask your prospective instructor about any specific requirements they are adding over and above the state mandated requirements. If those requirements are a problem for you, then choose a different instructor.
by Soccerdad1995
Fri Apr 13, 2018 10:41 am
Forum: Instructors' Corner
Topic: Lever-action pistol
Replies: 46
Views: 17425

Re: Lever-action pistol

The Annoyed Man wrote:
WildRose wrote:
The Annoyed Man wrote:
WildRose wrote:
The Annoyed Man wrote:
Jusme wrote:There are no regulations, in the LTC firearms proficiency test, that require any gun be fired with only one hand. To require that, of someone, with a non-traditional "pistol" seems unfair. JMHO
Might be justifiable for safety reasons.
There is no "one hand" requirement for qualification.
See my post immediately above yours.
I did and no such one hand firing requirement exists in Texas.
For some reason, your reply is rubbing me the wrong way - intentionally or not. You joined the forum on Wed Jan 31, 2018 at 12:30 am, and have 34 posts. I joined the forum on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 10:59 am, and I have 23,389 posts. I think by now that I understand a little bit about what is required in qualification and what is not. I don't really need to explain myself to you, but I will.......

I completely understand that there is no such requirement. I also completely realize the fact of the matter that some individual instructors sometimes take upon themselves the authority to apply arbitrary standards during qualifications. If you think this is not happening, you're fooling yourself. They may (see dictionary definition of MIGHT/MAY below) do so for any number of reasons, but it usually has to do with questions of accommodating handicapped, elderly, or inexperienced shooters.

https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/might
Definition of might

past tense of MAY

1 —used to express permission, liberty, probability, or possibility in the past • The president might do nothing without the board's consent.
2 —used to say that something is possible • We might get there before it rains. I might go, but then again, I might not.
3 —used to express a present condition contrary to fact • If you were older you might understand.
4 a —used as a polite alternative to may • Might I ask who is calling?
4 b —used as a polite alternative to ought or should • You might at least apologize. I might have known she'd be late.
I used the word "might" in the context of definition #2. I could have alternatively said "possibly be justifiable for safety reasons", or "maybe justifiable for safety reasons".

If you spend enough time both studying CHL/LTC law and it's occasional imprecision (this forum is chock full over the past 10 years of examples) people have questions because there are vagaries in the common use of language which can cause some imprecision. Often, these vagaries are due exactly to use of language issues like the example defined above. There might (could/maybe/possibly) be multiple definitions for a single word in common use, and that affects how people understand (A) the law, and (B) what people say about the law.

An important principle in the law is that it does not MAKE a thing legal, it only makes things illegal. By default, all things are legal. LTC law is a perfect example.... at one time, it was completely lawful to openly carry a handgun without permission. Then a law was passed making it illegal. Then another law was passed making an exception to the first law if the bearer held a gov't permission slip, but it still remained illegal for anyone else. Under that standard, just because there is no requirement in the law for two handed use of a firearm, there is neither any requirement that enforces either a one-handed or two-handed standard during qualification. The Instructor/RSO is tasked with enforcing range safety, AND with trying to get his/her students to pass the qualification. If a student showed up with an Austrian Pfeifer-Zeliska revolver chambered in .600 Nitro Express Magnum (see image below), that gun would be permitted for qualification because it is a handgun. But let us also stipulate in this example that the student had never fired a handgun before, and the Pfeifer-Zeliska was loaned to him by his evil twin Skippy, who thought it would be a hilarious practical joke on the poor student. You'd have to forgive the instructor if he/she wanted to make sure that the situation was safe, and so he/she might (maybe/possibly) justify to themselves the necessity of imposing a stricter safety standard than that imposed on the student who shows up with a Glock 19.

Image

In fact, in the 8th post on page 1 of this thread, the OP who had asked the question in the first place said:
skeathley wrote:I decided to disallow this gun for the Proficiency. It violates the spirit of the law, if not the letter.

:rules:
If you want to argue about one-handed requirements, go ahead; but you'll have to find someone else to do it with. I'm out.
Everything you say makes sense, except that I can't imagine the situation where requiring one handed firing would make things safer. I think this would almost always make things less safe. Similar to imposing an arbitrary requirement that students must qualify while blindfolded. Apparently within the instructor's discretion, but generally would result in a less safe situation for all involved.

This is the opposite of the situation you cited where a student is using a gun they might not be able to handle, where reasonable additional restrictions may likely make sense for safety reasons (like requiring them to qualify separately so you can focus on just that one student).

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