Jump to content
Brian Enos's Forums... Maku mozo!

amokscience

Classified
  • Posts

    74
  • Joined

Posts posted by amokscience

  1. I had to RO a stage at a major where it was a circle. No way I was going to follow the shooters up front regardless of wanting to pick up shots. Depending on which way the shooter ran, it was obvious which would be the last position. On the few shooters that missed a target I kept my distance while making sure the timer picked up the last shots. It's not hard to deal with when you don't over think it. Use common sense when the situation conflicts with rules or guidance. 

     

  2. 1 hour ago, B_RAD said:

    Which, IMO, is not something you should Do. Unless the shooter ask a question the RO should only be saying commands per the rule book. Meak ready. Are you ready? Stand by.  The shooter is going thru their process and doesn't need to be processing anything else. 

     

     

    That's fair. This is stated outside of make ready, most likely at the briefing on a problematic stage. I've never had anyone push back since no one wants to reshoot over and over. I've seen dozens of pcc shooters have to reshoot because the RO was too lackadaisical handling the timer, which does even more to mess with their performance. 

  3. I wouldn't bother with a rule.

     

    I would eject them from the range. I would go to the range owner or board if the MD refused to back me up. I've been hit by a full sized 45 slug while walking between bays and have seen a ricochet from a bay over punch a hole in a no shoot. Multiple instances of frags drawing blood from over 15 yards back. No tolerance. 

  4. At a local I'm going to fix the issue and explain what the correct call is. It's a good balance of getting on with the match and lack of diligence exhibited by ROs at locals vs making sure people know what the rulebook says. At a major this should be vetted out by staff and then you follow the calibration procedure if the shooter desires. 

  5. Using reasoning and common sense is the way to handle the unexpected or undocumented. Safe the weapon as much as possible (slide disassembly if possible), holster and call the range clear, escort the shooter to an area where he can work on it under supervision.

  6. You're too slow. The game is points per second. If you want to finish near the top, your total time needs to be like the leaders. You aren't in the conversation until your time gets closer. As far as points, misses and no shoots and procedurals take away ~twice as many points as you can earn. 

     

    You hit a no shoot at almost contact distance. We all make mistakes like that but that should haunt you and you need to take steps to fix that. A procedural likely means you are ignorant of some rule or didn't read the stage briefing correctly. Plan better. That's a 100% avoidable error. 

  7. Someone else here posted the best checklist.  Goes something like: bullets go into the mags which go into the gun which goes into the holster which goes on the belt which goes onto the inner belt/pants.  You can beg, borrow or buy anything else if you forget them.

  8. From personal experience:

     

    Have a website that is working, has up to date information, filled with content relevant to a new shooter, and doesn't look like it was designed in 1996.  Same goes for whatever social media outlet you use.

     

    Try this: Google USPSA in <city/state> and see what the first 5 links are and if that would convince your target audience to try something brand new.

  9. Lots of extra primer tubes.

     

    I bought a thumbscrew for the primer station so I could unscrew it without an allen wrench.

     

    I would do the zip tie mod.  Reduces spillage significantly.

     

    Set the swager correctly then run an undecapped piece of brass in the swager station.  It should feel mushy.  If you ever feel that, stop and check before you accidentally double prime.

     

    I removed the ratchet on mine after a few thousand rounds.  You'll see why eventually.

     

    Make sure the semi-circle stopper on the back of the primer slide is set correctly.  You'll get a mystery jam sometimes if it's set wrong.

     

    There are two small holes on the case feeder where tiny particles can fall out.  I fashioned and taped a couple paper cones there to catch the debris.

  10. I've watched a shooter put two into a wide open target then a third bullet-blob appeared (on a no shoot) as he transitioned to another target. It was from the next bay or two over. I went with what I heard and saw although that would be a tough call if we needed an RM to look at the target. 

×
×
  • Create New...