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My 18 B-day is coming up, and well my b-day gift is my gun license.
So, anywhere I can do like practice test etc.
So, anywhere I can do like practice test etc.
If you are of average intelligence you will pass without practice tests.
Thanks mate, I had to do my driving license twice both my class 7 and 5 so I dont want a repeat of that lolThe easy way is to get the paper student handbook(s), and read them, then take the course, and then the tests immediately thereafter.
Here's 6 videos for the Canadian firearms safety course. Ancient stuff.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wVnKDEqsRHA
The latest manual (student handbook) is version 5 from 2014, which combines both CFSC and CRFSC into one manual:
http://publications.gc.ca/collections/collection_2015/grc-rcmp/PS99-2-2-1-2014-eng.pdf
There's a free on line test exam at the bottom of
http://www.firearmstraining.ca/exam.htm
Here's the old 2008-ish manuals (don't read these)
http://www.gov.pe.ca/photos/original/CFSCmanualVer2.pdf
http://www.gov.pe.ca/photos/original/CRFSCmanualV2.pdf
yep
Okay note taken. Use that if they have it.When you do your practical portion, pick a break action shotgun. They're the easiest thing on earth to prove safe. Look down the barrel....yep....unloaded and safe. Done.
When you do your practical portion, pick a break action shotgun. They're the easiest thing on earth to prove safe. Look down the barrel....yep....unloaded and safe. Done.
You got to choose?
I did both restricted and non-restricted rolled into one course. Two practicals done at the same time. The instructor had a whole bunch of various actions; rifles, shotguns, pistols, revolvers all scattered across the table. He then said "Pick up a *insert non restricted action here* and prove it safe". After that was done he said "Now pick up a *insert restricted action here* and prove it safe".
I got what he called the cowboy combo, a lever action rifle and a double action revolver. My dad got a pump action shotgun and a semi-auto pistol iirc.
Either way, don't worry about it too much OP. Pay attention and you'll be just fine. My girlfriend did her PAL and RPAL last year. She'd shot a few times with me and I'd given her a basic run down of the actions I own (bolt, pump, semi rifle) but she had to learn the practical handgun stuff in the course as I don't own any right now. She passed with flying colours.![]()
When you do your practical portion, pick a break action shotgun. They're the easiest thing on earth to prove safe. Look down the barrel....yep....unloaded and safe. Done.
When you do your practical portion, pick a break action shotgun. They're the easiest thing on earth to prove safe. Look down the barrel....yep....unloaded and safe. Done.
as mentioned before talk your way through because even if you don't completely properly demonstrate what you are doing the examiner will still know what you are attempting to do.
You got to choose?
And of course, do the correct things with your hands -- no touching the trigger, no sweeping the instructor.






