25 M RAPID FIRE PISTOL


'25 m Rapid Fire Pistol' is one of the ISSF shooting events. The event has been a part of the Olympic program ever since the beginning in 1896, although its rules changed greatly before World War II, after which they were only slightly changed until the two major revisions of 1989 and 2005. The latter conformed the equipment rules to those of 25 m Standard Pistol, thereby banning .22 Short cartridges as well as encircling grips and low trigger-pull weight. This caused a decline in results: the pre-2005 world record was 597, while the present world record is 591.
Instead of dropping specialized rapid fire pistols, manufacturers designed new pistols, such as the Walther SSP, conforming to the Standard pistol requirements, but optimized for the rapid fire event.

Contents
Course of fire
Notable RFP shooters
Current world records
Olympic and World Champions since 1947
External links

Course of fire


The centers of the targets are 75 cm apart, and the 10 score zone has a diameter of 10 cm.

When paper targets (as opposed to electronic scoring systems) are used, thin scoring rings are printed on the target. The thick aiming lines are present in both versions.

Traditionally, RFP competitions use paper targets that are able to turn 90 degrees to appear to the shooter and then turn back to disappear when the shooting time is up. During the last few decades, these targets have gradually been replaced by electronic devices which use red and green lights to indicate the beginning and the end of the shooting time, and which automatically handle late shots. As these systems are expensive, they are normally only used in international competitions.
A ''series'' (or ''string'') consists of five shots fired at one target each within a limited time. The targets stand next to each other at a 25 m distance from the shooter. When the targets appear, the competitor must raise his arm from a 45 degree angle, and fire his five shots. If a shot is too late, it will score as a miss.
There are three different time limits for the series: 8 seconds, 6 seconds, and 4 seconds. A stage consists of two series of each type, and a full course of fire comprises two such stages, or a total of 60 shots. Since the targets are divided into concentric score zones with 10 being the most central part, the total maximum score is 600.
In major competitions, the top six shooters qualify for a final round of four additional 4-second series, using decimals of points. The results of the qualification round and the final are added together, and any ties are broken by firing an additional 4-second series.

Notable RFP shooters



★ Hungarian Károly Takács not only had to change from his right hand to his left due to an accident, but also thereupon became the first to win two successive Olympic gold medals, in 1948 and 1952.

★ Pole Josef Zapedski was the second to achieve this, in 1968 and 1972. Ammunition malfunction prevented him from attempting a third gold.

★ German Ralf Schumann, the most merited RFP shooter of all times, is the only shooter ever to achieve the three-time Olympic victory: 1992, 1996 and 2004.

★ Russian Sergei Alifirenko won the 2000 Olympic gold, and was the shooter who was most successful in the first year with the new rules, winning the European championships and the World Cup Final.

Current world records


Men - Qualification '591'
Alexei Klimov
2006, Granada Team '1743'
China
2006, Zagreb
Men - Final '788.8'
586+202.8
Ralf Schumann
2007, Fort Benning
Junior Male '588'
Ding Feng
2007, Fort Benning Team '1716'
Germany
2005, Belgrade

Olympic and World Champions since 1947


Year Individual Team
'Olympics'
1948 Olympics, London Károly Takács
1952 Olympics, Helsinki Károly Takács
1956 Olympics, Melbourne Stefan Petrescu
1960 Olympics, Rome William McMillan
1964 Olympics, Tokyo Pentti Linnosvuo
1968 Olympics, Mexico City Jozef Zapedzki
1972 Olympics, Munich Jozef Zapedzki
1976 Olympics, Montreal Norbert Klaar
1980 Olympics, Moscow Corneliu Ion
1984 Olympics, Los Angeles Takeo Kamachi
1988 Olympics, Seoul Afanasijs Kuzmins
1992 Olympics, Barcelona Ralf Schumann
1996 Olympics, Atlanta Ralf Schumann
2000 Olympics, Sydney Sergei Alifirenko
2004 Olympics, Athens Ralf Schumann
'World Championship'
1947 WCH, Stockholm Carlos Enrique Diaz Saenz Valiente
1949 WCH, Buenos Aires Huelet Benner
1950 WCH, Oslo Huelet Benner
1954 WCH, Caracas N. Kalinichenko
1958 WCH, Moscow Alexander Kropotin
1962 WCH, Cairo Alexander Zabelin
1966 WCH, Wiesbaden Virgil Atanasiu
1970 WCH, Phoenix Giovanni Liverzani
1974 WCH, Thun Alfred Radke
1978 WCH, Seoul Ove Gunnarsson
1982 WCH, Caracas Igor Puzirev
1986 WCH, Suhl Adam Kaczmarek
1990 WCH, Moscow Ralf Schumann
1994 WCH, Milan Krzysztof Kucharczyk
1998 WCH, Barcelona Ralf Schumann
2002 WCH, Lahti Marco Spangenberg
2006 WCH, Zagreb Zhang Penghui
'Junior World Championship'
1994 WCH, Milan Joseph Gonzalez
1998 WCH, Barcelona Jorge Llames
2002 WCH, Lahti Martin Behrendt
2006 WCH, Zagreb Christian Reitz

External links



★ The International Shooting Sport Federation - Official site

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