Hits and penalties in the IPSC

IPSC practical shooting technical guide on A, C and D hits and penalties M (miss), NS (did not shoot) and PROC (procedure), with impact on the score, hit factor and evolution strategy.

acertos e penalidades ipsc M NS PROC ipsc pontuação ipsc alfa charlie delta ipsc

Understanding A, C, D, M (miss), NS and PROC is essential to interpret the result per stage and create an improvement plan based on data.

Recommended Action

See where your penalties are concentrated and create a training plan by type of stage.

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Quick actions

Hit factor

How pace and points combine on the track.

What is hit factor

Combined

Read the overall with context of penalties.

Combined results

Athlete details

A/C/D and M/NS/PROC per stage.

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What you get on this page

Quick summary

  • Objective reading of hit types.
  • Real impact of penalties on ranking.
  • How to reduce errors in training cycles.
  • See the sections below and the shortcuts to apply to your test or transmission.

Hits and scoring

Hits A, C and D directly affect the track score. The difference between the largest and smallest factor changes the weight of C and D in the final bill.

Penalties and Competitive Damage

M (miss), NS (did not shoot) and PROC (procedure) cause significant loss of points and worsen the hit factor of the track. In balanced events, a few penalties can significantly change the ranking and percentage compared to the best in the division.

Error-Driven Training

By mapping where penalties are repeated, athletes and coaches can prioritize specific corrections and measure progress more accurately.

Continue in the Scoring Services ecosystem

This article is part of /pages/ipsc-guide. To apply it in practice, open a test at https://im.scoring.services/list or follow the steps at /matches. Recreational athletes can start with the comprehensive guide at /tiro-practico-guide-completo.

Points table (hits and penalties)

Hits — A (Alpha): 5 points always; C (Charlie): 4 (Major) or 3 (Minor); D (Delta): 2 (Major) or 1 (Smallest). Penalties — M (Miss), NS (No Shoot) and PROC (Procedural): -10 points each. These values ​​are used in the calculation of track points and, together with time, form the hit factor (/pages/hit-factor). See the effect in the aggregate in /pages/combined-results.

Frequently asked questions

Which error most harms the result?

It depends on the context of the test, but recurring penalties generally cost a lot in final percentage.

How to analyze penalties by stage?

Use combined results and athlete details to find error patterns by track type.

Is it possible to reduce penalties without losing pace?

Yes, with technical adjustment and execution strategy based on real data.

Are PROC and NS worth the same thing?

No. NS (did not shoot) and PROC (procedure) have different rules and impacts on the regulations — see your summary and cross-reference with /details-athlete-ipsc.

How many points is worth each correct answer (A, C, D)?

A (Alpha) is always worth 5 points. C (Charlie) is worth 4 points in the Major Factor and 3 in the Minor Factor. D (Delta) is worth 2 points in the Major Factor and 1 in the Minor Factor. Factor details in /factor-major-vs-minor-ipsc.

What is the value of the M, NS and PROC penalties?

Miss (M), No Shoot (NS) and Procedural (PROC) penalize -10 points each. How they impact the hit factor: /pages/hit-factor and /pages/combined-results.