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jar

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Posts posted by jar

  1. What would you consider a good amount of time to stick with a division? The opposite of your guy who grew roots in Limited are the many shooters who shoot a different division every match and are C or D class in all 6 and probably always will be.

  2. It depends on the bullet profile. I use the precision black bullets (flat points) and have to load them short (1.105") so the rifling doesn't get engaged. This is in various 9mm M&P's with factory barrels.

    I can load them a little longer than that, I have to check my notes at home, but I think it's 1.120. 1.135 was definitely too long.

  3. Maybe calling them by the correct name will help. ;)

    Seriously though, don't obsess over the classifier. It's just another stage. Try making a commitment not to look at your classification page for six months. I bet if you do that you'll be pleasantly surprised by a card in the mail.

  4. Good on both of you for handling it well. I recently brought a new shooter to his first match. I avoided ROing him because I didn't want the temptation to let anything slide. He shot very safely and had a great time and is definitely hooked now.

  5. I have shot plenty of matches where the MD or that particular SO on a stage has deemed that you must be within "x" distance of cover for you to be considered in cover.

    That's the real dichotomy in idpa, between those who do the best they can enforcing the rules as written and those who make up rules to suit their perception of the spirit of the game.

    Sent from my PG06100 using Tapatalk

  6. Just for giggles, I punched that load (I substituted Hornady's 124gr FMJ/FP) into Quickload and got 41,575PSI and 1,356FPS. I then changed it to Hornady's 124gr FMJ/RN, and it went to 61,725PSI and 1,452fps :surprise: There's a reason we work up to this stuff slowly!

    COAL is a bad measurement as far as pressure is concerned for just this reason. A measure of the amount of case without bullet in it would be better since that's what affects pressure. Unfortunately, you can't measure this easily. It would be really helpful if manuals listed the length of the bullet so you could subtract and compare available case volume.

  7. I've been told that there was a precendent of described case at a Level 3 IPSC match several years ago with a live round inthe gun on load and make ready. It went to the arbitration and competitor won it on the ground that it was an RO fault to not check the gun on his last stage. I believe IROA president made this ruling.

    That's a difference between IPSC and USPSA. In USPSA, it's always on the shooter.

  8. Step back and move away from the idea. Just move along, nothing to see here.

    Seriously, I don't think we want to start off down this path. Will we someday play with lasers? maybe electron pulse guns. burn a hole in paper, tone it down so the steel falls instead of getting a hole melted throu, but for now, 9mm is the lower size for all rounds, and 10mm is the lower size for major in all but Revo and Open.

    We have a successful sport here, let us not screw it up. No one needs another arms race. Right now the big thing is can I get 20 or 21 in a mag, open up to 9mm and we effectively turn all the .40 guns to expensive paper weights. Think not? how many people shoot Limited with a .45?

    Did you miss the part where I said "I'm not saying the rules should be changed and make everyone buy new guns"? I just think it's an interesting theoretical question. How low in diameter can you go and still make major while not making the length too long for a usable grip?

  9. Accuracy is a tactic, speed is a tactic, Fast Accuracy is the best tactic. Too Slow is a NO GO, So is Too Fast. Shoot too fast to hit and you won't win, shoot so slow you can't miss and you won't win either.

    The problem isn't too fast, it's not accurate enough. Trying to control speed usually leads to a blown stage for me. The best stages I've shot, I got to the end and thought I called every shot, but when I compared the time to others around my skill level it was much faster.

  10. In my opinion you really can't ever gig anybody for round dumping. I have a good index and if my contacts fall out I can't see anything but I could probably index on targets and get lucky but might want some extra incentive. Is that a crazy example, yes, but until we can read minds its one of those rules that is just to hard to call. The cheating part is on the shooter.

    You can if you hear them telling their buddies about their round dumping plan during the walkthrough. I've warned guys a few times that 'while I normally wouldn't give a penalty for round dumping because it's hard to determine intent, since you told me you plan to do it, I'll ding you for it if you do'. No one has done it after that warning yet.

    I'm with you 100% on the other comment. If people spent half the time they spent trying to skirt the rules on shooting faster and more accurately, it would have a far better effect on their match results. Even if you get away with it, you know you cheated. Some people care more about this than others.

  11. Since the thread is back, I'll throw in one. Pay careful attention to how you use cover. Sometimes you can eliminate a lot of movement while still using cover properly. You just have to have your lower body and 50% of the upper body hidden from the target. This doesn't mean you need to run right up to a wall and lean around the corner. Depending on the stage layout, you can find opportunities to shoot on the move that other people don't see.

  12. The .40 caliber rule is there to keep Limited from being an arms race to see who can make the tiniest diameter case that makes major. I really don't want to see 26 round Limited guns in .30 carbine.

    There's still a 0.354 minimum overall. I'm not saying the rules should be changed and make everyone buy new guns, but the arms race would still have a stopping point.

    Now you've got me thinking about what craziness we'd see if you dropped the 0.354 requirement for Open.

  13. But for the local monthly club match, it's still a pain in the butt.... especially if you get one squad that is twice the size of every other one. When they reach the 30+ round field course, squads start stacking up at that stage very quickly. Especially if the shooters are not pasting and resetting steel.

    This is what most of the clubs in the NE section (at least the ones I've visited) do:

    Next to sign in is a table with one target on it for each squad(white side up). Shooters write their name and shooter number(at the clubs with palms) on the target. Someone watches the targets, and if one gets un-balanced, it gets turned over until the other squads catch up. People who want to shoot together can have the first guy who gets there put all the names on a squad if they want. This seems to work very well. If you get there late, you're stuck with the shortest squad. If you show up early/on time you can shoot with whoever you want, if you're late, tough.

  14. The other big advantage of reloading that many people don't mention is that you don't have to go around tracking down and buying factory ammo. I like that when I need ammo, I just go make it. During the great ammo shortage of 2008-2010, once I found a place with primers in stock and ordered a few cases, I was set for 2 years.

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