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freeidaho

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Posts posted by freeidaho

  1. It doesn't disable the lock. The lock is still perfectly functional.

    Duane,

    You have done this, or used a lock with the technique applied. Cuz on a bolt, blue loctite will change a nut from being able to move with the fingers to needing 15 or so foot pounds of force. Just askin.....

    kr

  2. I'm still waiting for someone to tell me exactly where the locktite goes. :goof: My experience with blue locktite is that heat is sometimes needed to remove the part.

    Bill,

    The locktite arguement never made sense to me anyway. If it disables the lock, it disables the lock. The method doesn't matter much.

    kr

  3. I can only assume the extended Lone Wolf button doesn't take the gun beyond that width. (That was a question, by the way. :))

    Duane, et. al.;

    I believe the mag release button on the large framed guns is the extended one from the small frame guns. (Glock)

    But to get a truly extended one, one can use the Lone Wolf as you suggest. However the Lone Wolf button, un-trimmed does not meet the IDPA spec of only protruding 0.200". But when trimmed to that dimension allows me to release the mag without changing grip on my G21.

    kr

  4. Anyone else notice the pattern in the anecdotes told here. It seems when a shooter alternates between focusing on speed, and then accuracy, that both increase. Maybe it is an iterative approach that is needed to gain both. Then on game day, let the subconscious drive.

    kr

  5. Have y'all thought about something like the RRT. It was austensibly designed for IDPA, but you get the idea. http://www.parmarng.org/freeidaho On the second screen choose a link on the left "Reed_Reactive_Target" It only has steel in the down zero areas. It could be used without paper in front of it so make it a purely steel target.

    It is also caliber insensitive. A 25cal pistol round knocks it down.

    kr

  6. The only difference between a G22 frame and a G17 frame is the ejector, and that's a changable part. Otherwise there is no marking anywhere that would make it belong to a specific caliber. Therefor, one might say that it's not the frame that determines the caliber, but the slide on the frame.

    Actually, if one wants to pick nits (and I don't) I believe the caliber is encoded in the serial number of the frame. That is, with a serial number you can look up the date range of manufacture and the model of gun it was originally.

    None the less the original question was about a barrel swap, which has been ruled a no-no in any division for Glocks.

    kr

  7. One chould note that a 5" semi-auto barrel includes the chamber. On a revolver a 5" barrel does not. If you compare a 5" semi-auto and 4" revolver, they have about the same length chamber + barrel. Or in other words, they are roughly the same physical size. So no 5" revolvers makes sense in that regard.

    kr

  8. If y'all have written your own rulebook and are not using IDPA or IPSC or USPA in your advertising, then great, have fun, or even copyright your new sport.

    But as soon as you use those registered trademarks or refer to one of their rulebooks for conflict resolution, y'all are stealing from them.

    kr

  9. How would anyone even know?

    I thought frame serial numbers had various ranges assigned to different model numbers. So it may be possible. But I am not advocating this, just sayin'....

    kr

  10. Don't shy away from reading the rule book. It isn't like the NYC yellow pages of other shooting sports. You can cover it in an hour.

    The first step is that you will be a Safety Officer, SO, not RO.

    kr

  11. Howdy,

    Just a quick note to advertise a sanctioned IDPA match in Wyoming. I hope to see you there! It should be big fun!

    Ken Reed

    2009 Wyoming State IDPA Championship

    Hosted by Ghost Town Shooters - Casper Wyoming

    Saturday July 18, 2009

    12 stages Approximately 150 rounds

    Entry Fee: $45.00

    After July 10: $55.00

    Lunch for participants will be provided

    Shooter's meeting: 7:45am

    Match starts at: 8:00am

    Held at the excellent Stuckenhoff Shooting Complex Casper, Wyoming

    http://stuckenhoffshooterscomplex.net/contacts.htm

    For further Information and application form, contact Kevin Eberle, fastgun@vcn.com

  12. Ken,

    I'm criticizing a formula that seems illogical to me.

    I'm proposing a solution - that the multiplier not be such that it requires you to beat a higher number of shooters if they're classified above you.

    For that matter, I've set up a separate forum where people can propose rule changes.

    My intention is to be constructive... not to trash IDPA.

    Jane,

    Did not mean to offend as I know your heart is true. Sometimes I paint with too wide a brush, but was summarizing the whole thread, not your posts alone. My apology to you.

    The formula may be illogical, and it is arbitrary, and may not have been put into place by someone as skilled at numbers as you. The truth is that the second part of the rule has gone a long ways toward promoting the right people, and IDPA is much better off with the rule in place, no matter how illogical the math. I wrote comments to HQ about this rule too, back in Jan of 2005. It would be nice if it were easier to program, but still, it is a great addition that we didn't have in December of 2004.

    I am hopeful that the new rulebook will be much better. I know that lots of hard work is going into it.

    kr

    PS: just reread this whole thread, and my post is unfounded. Sorry, I got the posts from another forum mixed up with this one, and didn't read the whole thread here again before posting, thinking I knew what had gone on here in the last few days. So never mind. This thread has been very constructive. Thanks!

    I still think the new rulebook will be better. Perfect no, but better.

  13. In summary:

    Proposing solutions to issues is a good thing. The bump numbers are completely arbitrary. They could be 5, 10, 15 or 3, 7 and 11 if you like prime numbers. They could be the same for one classification and different for the classification above. It is an arbitrary number, easy to argue with.

    But criticising IDPA and its HQ is the only enjoyment some seem to get from the sport. Even the many parts of the rulebook that are crystal clear, some have found a way to ignore or modify for their own purposes.

    HQ has said they are working on a new rulebook. They have said they have a quote "Big Book" of clarifications to work on. If it was me, more flogging would not be motivational....

    Rest assured that when the new rulebook comes out, HQ will be rewarded with very few thank you, and more flogging.... I truly do not understand some of the participants of the sport. Most yes, some, not at all.

    kr

  14. 2009 Idaho State IDPA Championship

    · Saturday, September 19, 2009

    · SOs shoot on Friday

    · 10 - 12 Stages

    · Approx. 175 rounds

    · 125 shooters maximum

    · Marksman, Sharpshooter, Expert, and Master

    · SSP, ESP, CDP, SSR, and ESR

    · Lunch included

    · T-shirts and hats available

    See http://www.parmarng.org

    Pictures and videos of past state matches are here:

    http://www.parmarng.org/Pix/_Pix.html

    kr

  15. The shooter should go around with the SO while the targets are being scored. I've caught both hits that the SO didn't, and, on several sad occasions, had to tell the SO he was giving me too many points, as well.

    Duane,

    Good practice indeed. I have noted that there are two different types of shooters in this regard. Those that want an accurate score and those that want the best score possible even if it is not accurate. It is the later group that has an issue with the peanut gallery pointing things out. I can see you are in the first group by your comment above. And yet you manage to win most of the matches you enter. Hmmmmm. There must be some other factor that comes into play.

    kr

  16. I'm one of the guys that changed his carry gear based on IDPA performance. Went from Officers model to full size.

    You ANIMAL. :)

    Duane.

    Not so much.

    But I have been carrying a double stack full sized .45ACP ever since. First P14-45, now G21 which my hip likes much better after 16 hours. It is like concealing a brick, but it can be done, winter and summer, jeans and shorts.

    So the answer to shooting your carry gun and shooting a gamers gun is to....... make them the same gun.... much like you did!

    kr

  17. Unfortunately, the rule book doesn't make clear that the tac reloads in the classifier do not apply to revolver shooters.

    But the IDPA website's SO Instructions for Classification Match do:

    The key issue in the final stage is the "tactical reload." Shooters must be warned that the "tactical reload" requires the exchange of the partial magazine for a full one from behind cover. The partial magazine must be retained in a manner of practical carry. This means the partial magazine must be placed in a pocket, in the belt, or back in a magazine pouch. Lanyards, special baggy pockets, or placing the partial magazine in the mouth are not considered practical. If the partial magazine is dropped to the ground, the shooter may pick it up for retention without penalty. This is simply a standard re-load for revolver shooters.

    If you think your club's SOs may not be aware of that, you might want to print the web page.

    Jane,

    Unfortunately this phrase from the SO instructions for the Classifier stage 3 has been construed by some to mean that revolver shooter never ever have to retain rounds on a tac-reload or reload with retention, even if there are some live rounds in the mix. Which is not true. You can only abandon all of them when they are all spent. Or you can only abandon the spent brass. Either phrase works for the Classifier and regular IDPA stages too.

    Thanks for the link. I hadn't been there in a while.

    kr

  18. Sweet. But these are the exception to the rule. How many posts have there been here about putting the ICE magwell on x or y or z? And questions on how much do I have to mill of to make it fit in the box?

    I'm one of the guys that changed his carry gear based on IDPA performance. Went from Officers model to full size. So I understand the premise.

    But go to any discussion forum dedicated to CC and see the questions. They are mostly about smaller and lighter. How to conceal the P3AT, J-Frames and the like. Amazingly few questions about huge magwells, heavy barrels, weighted magazines, weighted grips, etc.

    kr

  19. For example, there are plenty of magwell/MSH combos out there that will improve your reload times and have no effect on the concealability of the gun, and add very little weight.

    Unnfortunately mag wells make the gun wider at the very place on the gun that prints the most. So when one carries in street clothes it often matters. If you carry under an IDPA vest, then you can easily conceal a collapsible stock 16" AR15.

    Ken Reed

  20. Another thought on weights I haven't heard before.

    I do not believe it was the founders intent for all guns in a division to be weighted up to the maximum. It seems to me that the founders wanted each gun to be short at nearly its original production weight. Part of the "no equipment race" provision of IDPA.

    That is why we have a maximum weight, and restrictions on what weight can be added. I'm sure this wasn't done by accident.

    So the thought of "just let me manage the weight of my gun," is probably contrary to the founders intention. They wanted competitors to pick a gun and shoot it, not tweak it to death as is popular in so many other sports.

    Just a though,

    kr

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