Mr. McCloy. That is all.

Representative Boggs. May I ask a question?

Where did you conduct these tests?

Mr. Frazier. The targets were fired both on the indoor range in the FBI range here in Washington and the 100-yard tests were fired at the Quantico, Va., FBI ranges.

Representative Boggs. Have any tests—have there been any simulated tests in the building in Texas?

Mr. Frazier. I don't know, sir.

Representative Boggs. But the FBI has not conducted any?

Mr. Frazier. Not to my knowledge. There may have been measurements and things of that nature taken, but I don't know.

Representative Boggs. Now, in these tests, was there any difficulty about firing this rifle three times within the space or period of time that has been given to the Commission—5 seconds, I think.

Mr. Frazier. Well, let me say this. I fired the rifle three times, in accordance with that system of timing it from the first shot with the chamber loaded until the last shot occurred—three times in 4.6 seconds, 4.8 seconds, 5.6 seconds, 5.8, 5.9, and another one a little over 6, or in that neighborhood. The tenth of a second variation could very easily be as a result of the timing procedure used. A reflex of just not stopping the stopwatch in a tenth of a second.