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Inkman

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Posts posted by Inkman

  1. Far, far more social media outlets aimed at the younger and a bit more tech savvy crowd than we had 15 yrs ago. Instead of starting a thread on a forum about their match or stages, it's simply more expedient and simple to have their best vid(s) thrown up on the Gram for friends and family to see.

    Additionally, chat rooms, discord, Signal group chats etc are much more private places to talk about guns and shooting stuff, than a general forum open to anyone with a phone. Many people prefer that. 

    :oldmanshakesfist

     

     

  2. Changing one target on a stage makes it a different stage. They'll change more than just a target here or there. The stages need to be checked. A lot. Even running a set up and staff match day sometimes isn't enough to get the bugs worked out.

     

    That said.......who cares? It's a kick ass, fun match every year. No huge prize table and nobody gaming their class to win a bottle of lube or a hard case roller bag. If ya ain't one of about 3 people shooting the match that has a chance to take home a plaque, go have fun. I know i will.

     

    Oh and don't be pissed :)

     

     Al

     

     

  3. I'd go the opposite. Forget about getting a ton of new people into the sport and focus on the small amount of new people who do try it out. All the regulars already know each other so when ya see the new guy or lady who has maybe been at practice but is at their first match, introduce yourself and TALK to them. Make them feel welcome. Make them feel comfortable around the top shooters. Ask them if they have any questions or want any advice. Those little bit of niceties will likely have them return and tell others how fun it was and how nice everybody was. They are the ones who will bring their friend to try it out. At least that is what i see happening here locally.

    There was a time at my home club years ago when the new guy was almost but not completely ostracized. If you were new and signed up on the wrong squad you were moved from the good old boy squad to the nerd couch at the cool kids house party squad. I personally know of quite a few who didn't return because of the feeling of being an outcast. Like i said, those new folks will be the ones to talk to their friends who may be on the fence about starting comp shooting. 

    As far as the new/intro class goes, we have a couple a month with 10 or 15 peope in each. Most never show up after that class even with a free match thrown in. Some have been coming to saturday practice for well over a year and have never shot a match. Some stuck with it and are awesome shooters, ROs and friends.

     

    YMMV.

     

     Al

     

     

  4. Couple things.

     

    1. First come, first served. Want in bad enough, you'll make time in your day at work or home to sign up or worst case for your SO to sign you up if needed.

     

    2. Dump the prize table entirely. Award plaques, medals or whatever, of course for the winners.  Prize table? Get rid of it. Sponsor money for match and stage sponsors with their name plastered on stages would likely work just fine. Any sponsor money goes to help offset the cost of rooms and food for staff and can even go to the host club for materials such as props, building supplies etc.

     

     Al

     

     

  5. I'll come up with my own stage plan and stick with it unless i see somebody on a walk thru or a run do something that i completely missed. I'll only consider it if it is a major time saver or saves a mag change at a crucial point and i have enough time to go over it in my head and be sure. Last minute changes don't seem to work out for me most of the time. Learned that the hard way lol.

    Anybody can ask me why or how i plan to shoot a stage. Usually i have no issue with it and i'm more than happy to explain why but when it becomes the norm from a seasoned shooter to always ask others how they plan to shoot a stage, it does become irksome. Part of the fun for me is figuring out the best way to shoot a stage on your own, not simply copy what everybody else does. Sometimes what everybody else does is simply the best way to run it anyway.

  6. +1 on Sleep Inn (now Quality Inn). Not the nicest place but it's in a decent area and can't be beat for price just to have a place to crash at nite. Prices are high for March but Quality will be about the cheapest for that area unless you want the Super 8 ghetto area.

    Al

  7. First week of spring training, snow birds staying south for the winter, cold climate people taking vacations where it's warm etc.

    Protip: Call the hotel and talk to the GM. That person will get you a better rate than any online site or desk person.

    I'd like to know if the match hotel (usually Country Suites?) is going to have a decent rate. As of now they are pushing $160+ a nite.

    Al

  8. *shrugs* Maybe you're right, but I don't read it that way. No-shoots are supposed to be one color or marked in some way, which is why we use the backs of paper targets to differentiate them. Black is for hard cover. What color are no-shoot metal targets then?

    I've seen em painted red and described as NSs in the WSB.

    Al

  9. Not a bad screw up as they go but today I had the screws on my blade-tech holster come loose. So loose that the backer for one completely fell off and was lost. Fortunately I noticed it and re-tightened them. As soon as I got home I found another backer and put some lock tight on all of the screws. Hopefully all of your screws are tight.

    Coincidence?

    Finished a 5 stage match sunday, put my gun away and as i took my belt off i saw a screw fall to the ground. Hmmmm....that's odd. Where'd that come from? CRAP. Good luck finding the backer for that in the gravel. Showed my bud who was going to give me an extra he had.

    Fast forward 20 or 30 minutes and at stage breakdown, somebody had found it (probably while picking up brass) downrange about 20 yds and laid it on the wire spool down there. What are the odds of finding that? Talk about a needle in a hay stack.

    Compare that to the times i can't find that 6th mag for 15 minutes when it is sitting there right in front of me the whole time. I swear that mag will warp to another dimension for a while just to mess with me before re-appearing.

    Al

  10. holy crap! 20 people on a squad? I think I would go home. Or get involved with putting on the match so it could be done right. Squad sizes of 8-12 seem to be optimal for local matches where the RO/scorekeeper are part of the squad. with a shooter, on-deck shooter, and up to 2 shooters who just shot and are cleaning mags and reloading, it still leaves you 2-6 people to paste and reset and pick up brass.

    Our club shoots for 10 as a squad size, and if we have 41 shooters, one squad gets 11, or if we have 38, 2 squads get 9.

    What do you do when 90 people show up? Turn em away? Do you have pre sign ups and a cut off?

    Down our way 18 per squad is a regular sunday match at most of the clubs in the bay area.

    Curious.

    Al

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