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Course Outline

Handguns fall into two basic types: revolvers (that fire from a revolving cylinder) and pistols (all other types, including auto-loading and single-shot handguns). There are two common types of actions used in sport shooting.

  • Single-Action Handguns
    • Single-action means that the gun must be manually cocked for each shot (revolvers) or for the first shot (autoloaders), usually by pulling back the hammer or cycling the slide.
    • A single-action handgun's manual cocking allows a shorter, lighter trigger pull that is an aid to accuracy; but an accidental light touch of the trigger will usually fire a cocked single-action gun if the safety is off.
  • Double-Action Handguns
    • Double-action means that trigger movement cocks the action as the trigger is pulled during firing, but the gun can also be manually cocked like a single-action. A gun which can be cocked only by trigger action (no manual cocking) is known by the term double-action-only.
    • A double-action handgun's trigger-cocking allows a faster shot, since no separate manual cocking is needed. A double-action gun's longer, heavier trigger pull is also considered safer. In fact, many double-action guns, especially revolvers, have no mechanical safety at all, since only a long, deliberate pull will fire the handgun.
Single-shot pistol (break-action)

Single-Shot Pistol (Break-Action)

Single-action revolver

Single-Action Revolver

Double-action revolver

Double-Action Revolver

Semi-automatic pistol

Semi-Automatic Pistol

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