 Again, shooters. You're going to vote three magazines, one magazine of ten rounds. Catom is combat arm training and maintenance. So essentially the career field for us is a shred out of security forces. Our main focus is to instruct war-fighting capable shooters for the Air Force. The main benefit for them is going to be the hands-on training of the weapons. I'm going to visually inspect to make sure my weapons aren't taken. And there's different types of learners. There's hands-on, there's visual. We hope to instill muscle memory. The end goal is for them to be able to grab it and be familiar with the weapon that they're being fought at. To be proficient in any weapon system, I'd say it would depend on the shooter and the practice they have because someone could walk in and just be naturally good at it or someone could have practice and practice and still, you know, not get it that first, second, even third try. But the practice does definitely help. So coming out and shooting definitely does help. And then hopefully they'll remember those fundamentals for next time so that way they can just stay proficient with it. I would say it varies between shooters, really. It's satisfying when you see that light bulb click and then you can see their holes on paper get a lot better. And then it's satisfying to know that you did that. You taught that person to tighten up that bullet grouping to make them a more lethal, capable airman.