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dsb

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    David Bateman

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  1. Even then it got gamed... The 'power factor' was calculated from the center of an 8 or 12 inch steel plate, if you hit it at the very bottom you effectively gained 4 to 6 inches of extra leverage and could swing the plate the required distance with less than the required power factor.
  2. That's all this is... A bunch of 'what ifs'. nothing to get all wound up about. I won my 'Class' in the first match I ever shot (late 70's)... They took the best score and then drew a line where all of the class percentages fell, if you came out at the top of the percentage bracket, you won that 'class' (A,B,C, and D, I don't remember them having master at the time, but I could be wrong). I imagine that would stir some people's grits these days...
  3. Would you say that the 2011 capacity over the 1911 was more or less of and advantage than the dot v. iron sights on any given 1911? If it's near as makes no difference then why wasn't something said/done at the time? If it was a mistake, why do we have to live with it forever? The only specific rule that I remember is that I wasn't allowed to run may SVi as a 10mm because they hadn't made enough in that caliber, never mind that people were blowing up .40s and the 10mm made major easily...
  4. Isn't that essentially what happened when they allowed the 2011's into Limited? Both the 1911 shooters and the 9mm double stack shooters were screwed.
  5. I shot IPSC matches in the late '70's (Before USPSA)... As I recall, the first scoring was just 5-3-1 until the guys convinced the powers that be that a hit from a .45 was worth more than a 9mm. The first El Prez I shot didn't have a mandatory reload and the guys shooting Hi Powers killed the 1911s (which were the majority) which is probably why it got changed. There used to be a concerted effort to make stages as power factor neutral as possible. There used to be an emphasis on the 'Practical' part of IPSC. The whole major/minor thing got gamed with the .38 supers, 9mm capacity with major power/scoring... and quite a few blown up guns. The main thing, as I recall, that was behind the push for Limited was the scopes/dots, they created a big gap in speed and accuracy over iron sights. The main thing, as I recall, that was the push for Production was the idea that the Glocks* couldn't compete with the 2011s. Personally, I think production got messed up, I don't see nearly as much difference between a 2011, 1911, or Stock 2, as I do between any of those and the polymer striker guns. A 2011 or Stock 2** are more similar than dissimilar for Limited, and any of the 3 would work for L10. I don't think there's a huge difference between shooting a G19 or a G34, or at least not so much as someone with a 19 thinking they didn't belong shooting against 34s. I do think that the gun being holstered with the butt above the belt is a good idea, and I think appendix carry should be legal in Production. I think that production should have Major/Minor scoring based on commercial ammo performance in whatever gun you're using, and there should be an increase in capacity for minor (i.e. 10rnds Major/15rnds minor). While this arrangement may not be 'newbie friendly' it makes more sense to me, and it may address some of what the OP is pondering. Just my $.02, and I can't remember if I've taken my meds today... *I'm using 'Glock' and Glock models as generic for all of the polymer striker guns... **I'm using 'Stock 2' as a generic example...
  6. Let me qualify this response by admitting that I'm a Theoretical Physicist and my approach may be unorthodox... When looking at potential loads I look for the outliers, which powder/bullet weight combinations have the largest/smallest mass spreads. For any given bullet weight, for example, the load data may show powders with a .6grn spread from min. to max pressure as well as powders with a 1 - 1.2 grain spread. I would use the powder with the largest spread. I wouldn't use the powder with the tightest spread. Then, if I didn't know what bullet weight I wanted to use, I would look at the spread of the powders across the different bullet weights, the powder with the largest spread for 115grn bullets (9mm example) wouldn't necessarily have the largest spread for 147's, but that would give me a better idea of what powder may be workable for the largest variation of bullet weights. Another consideration is the desired velocity with regard to the range of velocities for a given powder/bullet combo. If I can help it, I don't want to use a bullet/powder combo that's at either extreme end of the range (no starting load, no max load). I'd rather that the powder/bullet combo fall into the middle of the charge range. All things being equal (which they never are) if it's 'close', I'll use something I have, I'd rather not use a dirty powder, and how well the powder meters is of importance as well. I don't like using powders that are difficult to get a consistent charge from my powder measure. YMMV, D
  7. This is where I'm at... 1K of new Starline 10mm is $162 American... If you leave 200 cases at a match it cost you $32.40. If you fired them once already and this is the second time they've been used you've left the equivalent of $16.20 in 'new' brass. If this is the third time they've been fired, that's equal to $8.10 worth of 'new' brass. I'm not worried about $8 worth of brass. Yes, it's a rationalization... But, it's my rationalization, and I'm sticking to it. YMMV
  8. I like the division... shot a match with my carry gun (G29), though I had to get a different holster as AIWB is no joy... spent way too much time trying to find my brass (nobody picks up brass anymore?)... Looked at the rules, thought a 9mm commander would be a fun gun to shoot in CCP... Bought a RO Champion in Nov '16... now the 2017 v2 rules say I can't play CCP with it... It would seem that IDPA kicked me out of CCP.
  9. I went down this path with a G20... 125pf wouldn't reliably run the gun even with a 10# RSA... The lightest spring combination that just barely passes the 'vertical test' was a 13# RSA paired with a 4# striker... ~150pf was about the lightest load that would reliably run the gun with a 13# RSA... ~150pf didn't produce sufficient pressure to seal the chamber, which gave me a wider velocity spread than I'd like... Lack of chamber seal didn't help with accuracy... Had to file the front sight to get it anywhere near POA/POI, though the 7.3mm rear sight might do the trick... Even at ~150pf the recoil was laughable... HTH, Dave
  10. If you're talking to me... I never said anything about changing any rules, or even about being competitive at all, I was merely pointing out that L-10 has appeal to more than S_i shooters who live in mag capacity limited states. FWIW, I have open guns, and limited guns, as well as tupperware...
  11. Personally, I think USPSA is missing an opportunity with limited-10. Perhaps it's the unfortunate name, that the class originated as a result of unfortunate legislation, whatever, it has become the red headed step child, and it doesn't have to be. Nearly every sport has some sort of entry division, in some fashion production is/was supposed to be that for USPSA. But, there are a large number of people, myself included, that already have stuff that fits the L-10 class better than any other. I personally shoot a Glock 29, from concealment (AIWB, that neither production, nor IDPA allows), with ammo loaded to the same PF as my defensive ammo (that would be MAJOR), in L-10 and I think that others might be interested in doing something similar, if for no other reason than working with their actual carry gear. Whether marketing to this demographic would increase the L-10 participation to the level that would hold these 'elimination' debates at bay, I have no idea. Would it bring in new shooters? No clue, but I don't think that L-10 does that in it's 'Limited for those unfortunate few' guise either. Just a thought.
  12. FWIW, I am using brand new Wolff springs, and have found that on my G20 it takes at least a 13# recoil spring to pass the vertical test when using a 4# striker spring. Brand new 10, 11, and 12# recoil springs would not pass. YMMV
  13. I'm using Wolff springs and a Wolff guide rod in a Gen4 G20, with a Zev adapter button. I have used their 10# springs experimenting with light loads, but that light of a spring it won't pass the vertical test in my G20 even with a 4# striker spring. The G20 has a very heavy slide, I would think you'd be able to go lighter with a G23.
  14. With 32 round stages you're not going to get a 'functional' capacity advantage unless you cap 'major' at 15 rounds and force them to make 2 mag changes... Just out of curiosity, does anyone use these 140mm mags anywhere other than gun games?
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