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OUshooter

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Posts posted by OUshooter

  1. I had to DQ a friend of mine who rushed the procedure, by neglecting to drop the mag, and followed that up by not waiting for "If Clear, Hammer Down, Holster." That taught me to take it slow, and make sure the mags out and the chamber's empty....

    I would agree that the shooter should be DQed if this happened but,

    RO:IYAFUASC

    Shooter: Rack bang

    RO:Stop DQ for AD

    Shooter: I was making up a miss. You never gave ICHDH

    Where do you go from here. Unless the round hit the ground at his feet can you be sure he wasn't shooting at a target?

    I'm not sure that I like the command as writen. The SHOW CLEAR is what bothers me.If the shooter is required to show a

    clear gun to the RO shouldn't the RO be DQed for not making sure that the gun was clear also? In your example the

    shooter rushed and didn't show clear so it is all on him but if he shows you the gun shouldn't you own it also?

    What if he shows the gun and you see a round in the chamber that he missed, do you point it out or is that coaching?

    8.3.7 “If Clear, Hammer Down, Holster” – After issuance of this command,

    the competitor is prohibited from firing (see Rule 10.4.3). While continuing

    to point the handgun safely downrange, the competitor must

    perform a final safety check of the handgun as follows:

    8.3.7.1 Self-loaders – release the slide and pull the trigger (without

    touching the hammer or decocker, if any).

    32 • USPSA Handgun Rules, January 2008 Edition

    8.3.7.2 Revolvers – close the empty cylinder (without touching the

    hammer, if any).

    8.3.7.3 If the gun proves to be clear, the competitor must holster his

    handgun.

    8.3.7.4 If the gun does not prove to be clear, the Range Officer will

    resume the commands from Rule 8.3.6 (also see Rule 10.4.3).

    8.3.8 “Range Is Clear” – This declaration signifies the end of the Course of

    fire. Once the declaration is made, officials and competitors may move

    forward to score, patch, reset targets etc.

    I would argue that unless the RO can prove the competitor wasn't engaging a target, post IYAFUASC then there is no DQ. Seems a DQ would only come if the competitor ran afoul of a condition in 10.4 post-IYAFUASC but pre-ICHDH.

  2. I've seen it, but never RO'd it when they race through the ULSC and drop the pistol in the holster. It's also not uncommon to do what's been mentioned which is to slow them down and do it again. Never have had to repeat that for the same shooter in 1 match.

  3. i shoot 3 then cold tru the chrono, i shoot some practice then i chrono 3 just like a major. BUT i do it about 5 time at that practice session. i pay att. to the low FPS. write down temp, time, powder, everything about that round even brass. i have found different brass will cause major dev.

    I play a similar game. I will chrono the batch in groups of three to simulate a chrono stage. I will shoot anywhere from 5 to 8 groups. As long as the lowest FPS from each string gets me above my target PF I call it good. I will usually go through and group the ammo by headstamp. To date I haven't found a statistical difference. What I have found is that grouping by OAL will show a pattern, and the SD within a narrow ± range will be lower.

  4. I thought there was a rule that if you used a chrono, all competitors had to be tested.

    There is....

    So random testing, or testing the top three won't work....

    You will have to help me out Sir. All I can find is:

    5.8.1.5 Match Officials reserve the right to conduct chronograph or

    other tests on all and any ammunition, at any time, and a reason

    need not be given.

    Appendix C2:

    43. The Chronograph Station is considered an official stage in the match and

    subject to all sections of this rule book.

    Couldn't those not selected just be marked DNF on that stage? Thanks in advance.

  5. Thanks for the input folks, it's much appreciated. I'm gonna print this thread and take it to the range one night this week. I'm just B so I've got tons of room for improvement, but having such an obvious gaping hole in my skill set really bugs me.

  6. Check your trigger control. You can do this dry firing with an empty weapon at home. It works best if you have a camera and tripod you can set up behind you and to the left, and then again in front of you to the right. (assuming you are right handed) If it's not your trigger control, the video should help you diagnose the problem.

    Thanks for the tip. I will post them up on YouTube and let you all see if you can diagnose the issue.

  7. I dug around with the search, but couldn't find that which I seek.

    I went out today to punch some holes and decided to run the Three Sixes (9 of diamonds) drill from the DR Performance deck. If you are not familiar it's basically 15yrd bill drill.

    My weak hand strings were just awful. I've never done well with my left hand so I'm trying to really improve that aspect of my game. When running the WH string all my shots were low right. Even when I slowed down the shots where good elevation wise, but they were still going way right.

    I tweaked the drill and did it head shots only. Again WH was terrible. I had to hold off to the left of the head to get good hits. It started raining so I didn't have enough time to keep working to figure out the problem.

    I was starting to wonder if I'm tightening my grip as I break the shot. Would very much like to hear constructive input.

  8. As both a shooter AND an RO, i have had squibs. It happens no matter how fussy you are with ammunition and reloading.

    I haven't reloaded much -- maybe approaching 100,000 rounds after 12 years or so -- but I'm still awaiting my first squib. So, I'll disagree that they "have to happen."

    I've not loaded Nic's # of rounds, but I have to agreed. To imply that handloading is less safe than "factory" loads, and some % of squibs is ok doesn't fly with me.

  9. I'm a big fan of cans, but for Comp please leave them at home. The margin for error, i.e. distance from shooter to RO, isn't always optimal for suppressors. There are so many variables that using a can in comp just doesn't make sense. All it does is increase the odds of a reshoot.

  10. The same activator activates 4 things one of which is 100% visible at first.

    I know I haven't seen it all, but if it's Lvl II or > and you can see it you can shoot it. If the RM doesn't like it then that's on them for poor stage design.

    The only thing I can think of is if shooting the a fore mentioned target did something crazy like send a round over the berm. In that case it's poor stage design, but on the shooter(DQ) for taking the shot.

  11. 1. Just curious why you would tumble the finished rounds? Straight walled pistol cases sized with Carbide dies won't need any lube, and there shouldn't be any "grit".

    2. I use a EGW undersize die for my .40 exclusively. I get quite a few coke bottle shaped cases, but they pass gauge and function fine.

    3. I roll check each round before I load it in a mag, and toss any non-conformers into a bag. I typically don't roll check with case gauging, just because of time. But with a Lee FCD I have had split cases pass gauge.

    As others have said, odds are very high that the worse case is the round hits the cardboard and falls down. The chamber is what contains the pressure. I wouldn't shoot it, but I'm crazy like that.

    Since I'm using moly bullets they seem to be really tacky and that stickiness gets on the case I end up with pretty smeared up cases it makes it hard to see deformity's. I also figured the cleaner the cases are the less fouled up my barrel will get or am I over thinking this?

    The "moly" or dry lube shouldn't have any tacky or sticky feeling of any kind. If your bullets right out of the bag from the vendor are tacky they are defective.

    1. Have these dies been used before with hard cast lead bullets?

    a. If so clean them out the lube from the lead is built up in the die.

    b. If not where the dies cleaned out before being put into use?

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