A glance at Fast Draw competition
Updated: 2013-07-26 20:36
(Agencies)
|
||||||||
![]() |
|
Frank Lawton of Deadwood, South Dakota fires his single action revolver after cocking the gun with his left hand during the Canadian Open Fast Draw Championships in Aldergrove, British Columbia July 20, 2013. The present-day Fast Draw competition was born from the Hollywood myth of the western gunfighter, and the idea is to draw a single action revolver from a holster, and cock, fire and hit a designated target in the shortest possible time. No live ammunition is ever used, only blank cartridges or wax bullets. The targets are either a metal silhouette used with wax bullets or balloons that burst from the muzzle blast from the blank cartridges. A light atop the timer signals the competitor when to fire and once the target is hit, it turns the timer off, measuring the speed to thousandths of a second. Picture taken July 20, 2013. [Photo/Agencies] |
LeBron frenzy grips Guangzhou
Police to question driver for Spanish train crash
Top DPRK leader meets Chinese vice-president
US does not plan decision on Egypt coup
Bo Xilai indicted for corruption
Korean War veterans return to peninsula
Tourist safety a priority in S China Sea
Death toll in Spain train crash rises to 77
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
|
|
|
|
|
|
Today's Top News
Scholars provide a tour 'around the world'
GM says weakness in Asia leads to profit drop
Details of GSK China's alleged violations revealed
Syrian rebels ask Kerry to send US arms quickly
Flights over sea 'routine training'
US does not plan decision on Egypt coup
Congress approves NSA spying program
Japanese PM unlikely to visit Yasukuni Shrine
US Weekly
|
|
![Frank Lawton of Deadwood, South Dakota fires his single action revolver after cocking the gun with his left hand during the Canadian Open Fast Draw Championships in Aldergrove, British Columbia July 20, 2013. The present-day Fast Draw competition was born from the Hollywood myth of the western gunfighter, and the idea is to draw a single action revolver from a holster, and cock, fire and hit a designated target in the shortest possible time. No live ammunition is ever used, only blank cartridges or wax bullets. The targets are either a metal silhouette used with wax bullets or balloons that burst from the muzzle blast from the blank cartridges. A light atop the timer signals the competitor when to fire and once the target is hit, it turns the timer off, measuring the speed to thousandths of a second. Picture taken July 20, 2013. [Photo/Agencies] A glance at Fast Draw competition](../../attachement/jpg/site1/20130726/eca86bd9e2fb135cae2810.jpg)















