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sc68cal

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Posts posted by sc68cal

  1. As others have said, you should check the extractor claw and spring inside the breech face. You will need a long 1/8th T-handle wrench and a heat source. Take apart your slide, including removing the firing pin. Heat up the slide where the breech face is, and then unscrew the breech face screw by inserting the T-handle hex wrench into the firing pin channel.

     

    You can then take the breech face out completely, push the pin out that holds the extractor claw into the breech, then replace the spring and inspect the claw.

     

    You will probably want to have a vice handly to hold the breech face in place with the extractor claw inserted and the new spring inserted, so that you have both hands free to drive the pin back in to retain everything.

  2. Quote
    Competitors entered in a long gun and a handgun division may wear a
    holstered handgun while competing with the long gun.

     

    This rule implies that this is the only acceptable time under which a competitor can have a holstered handgun while competing with another gun. If a competitor is shooting a handgun while also having a handgun holstered that they are not going to use, this to me indicates that they have not assumed the correct start position under 8.2.4 and must be instructed to assume the correct starting position, which includes only having one handgun.

     

    Basically, summarizing what @zzt already stated.

  3. 54 minutes ago, Mythos said:

    Aha thats why you lighten the frame! But og the frame hasent been lightened should i still run the light springs or will it batter my frame up? 

    The slide, not the frame, is lightened.

     

    Spring weight will not significantly influence how much the frame gets battered. What really matters is how well the guide rod is fitted to the frame. If the guide rod is not fitted correctly, it will move under recoil and dig into the frame.

     

    https://youtu.be/w_89CEN682Q

     

    If you are worried about your frame, you can use a buffer (alumabuff, Wilson combat, etc) but there are tradeoffs. They will reduce the stroke length of the slide which can cause feeding issues and also can degrade and crumble and then cause the gun to jam.

     

    I've had a frame that came with Wilson combat buffs, and I used them for a while but eventually stopped replacing them. I'll show pictures of the wear. It's never been an issue and it's had a replacement top end

  4. When your gun has a compensator, the gas reduces the amount of recoil by directing gas backwards, which counteracts some of the forces. The slides are also lightened so that there is less moving mass hitting the back of the frame. Generally, the spring needs to be strong enough to strip a round from the magazine but not heavy enough where it slams the slide back into battery and makes the gun dip.

  5. 1 hour ago, MBM1969 said:

    New guy to the forum and new guy to USPSA shooting here.  I don't understand why so much difference between Carry Optics and Production.  Guns for both come from the Production gun list.  Shouldn't the only difference be iron sights vs a red dot?  Limited/Limited optics is this way, isn't it?  Same guns and modifications just iron sights and red dots?

     

    There are a lot of historical reasons for why things have turned out this way, but I think your perspective as a new shooter exactly illustrates a good reason for having production increase the magazine capacity. From the outside, the 10 round limit does not make sense anymore.

  6. Troy has a history of berating volunteer ROs at nationals. I saw an occurrence with my own eyes. Will never volunteer for a national event, and never worked a major match after that.

     

    There's a way to communicate with people that is respectful. Clearly Troy does not care and does not respect anyone else.

  7. While the Cameo issue may have been the catalyst, what is really important to keep in mind is that the Board, at multiple points was unable to take any criticism and instead decided to escalate. They should not be surprised that the people they have banned for life from the sport didn't just disappear, and instead are deciding to escalate in kind.

  8. 1 hour ago, Makicjf said:

    why not change to match most production gun mag capacities

     

    15 is the lowest common denominator for "wonder nine" pistols. There are certainly pistols out there that come with larger stock capacities, but there are lots that come with 15. Production should accommodate as many stock pistols as possible and 15 is probably the sweet spot

  9. 6 hours ago, Ice36 said:

    Where at the start of a stage you have more than 8 shots but because they say you can see them from another spot or that you turned its more than one view, forcing standing reloads or finish a stage with more than 8 shots but because you could have shot them from a much harder position. it's within the rules and everyone in the same class has the same reload issues but when you have to do a standing reload at the start of a stage over and over again, its not competitive for the overall.

     

    This is sadly an issue with bad stage designs. Designers are getting very creative with the definition of a position and it's not fair to the lowcap divisions. Talk to your club match director and ask them to stop making stages that punish low cap divisions. It is very easy to design stages that are fun, interesting, and don't punish divisions. It just takes someone actually caring

  10. One thing to consider is that 9x23 brass from starline is only 3 cents more per case compared to 38 super comp.

     

    It may be more economical to just shoot 9x23, since it will have a recoil and dot tracking like 38sc and ease of reloading compared to 9major.

  11. Ontelaunee does a 10-12 stage monthly match, where Saturday 20-30 shooters come in the morning and build the stages, then shoot. Sunday is the main match where 100+ shooters shoot and then tear down and put away everything.

     

    It works, I love the match and help on Saturdays but there is a core contingent of staff that make it all actually work, and they devote tons of their personal time to making it happen. Staff that know how to operate the heavy lifting equipment, handling registration, where everything is located in the shed, how to calibrate poppers, etc etc. I just show up, drag stuff into bays, build the stage to a rough approximation of what is in the diagram, and then have one of those staff members come and take a look and do final adjustment. Then I RO the squad I'm assigned to (or pick) for the day and then go home. The staff on the other hand, have to come back on Sunday and run the main match, then supervise it all being torn down and put away.

     

    The key is going to be keeping staff from burning out, and also recruiting/training more people to act as staff

  12. On 7/14/2023 at 6:17 PM, shred said:

    Locaps are partly dead because when CO took off, stage designers and builders blew off 1.2.1 "8 rounds per view" with some lame "well you could shoot those targets from 20 yards further back if you want, so 14 rounds from that one spot is fine" or "there's the edge of a wall between them... different 'view'" and nonsense like that.

    22 hours ago, BritinUSA said:

    Stage design at L1 matches can make or break divisions. If every stage has 8-shot arrays and 32 rounds then lo-cap shooters are going to either drift away or switch to hi-cap divisions.

      

    I 100% believe that these two tendencies at local club matches were the cause of production and other low-cap divisions dying. I shot a match in a 10-round state, with Single Stack (major) and even though the maximum capacity was 10+1 versus my 8+1, there were stages where if you went 1-for-1 on steel and then used your two extra shots on an optional target, you could save a position and really pick up some time, and you still had a make up round just in case. There were stages that you had a view of some targets, twice, but it was really stretching. I think also the fact that the majority of the shooters and the people who run the match are shooting CO, it really drives stage design to be more difficult since the top shooters are running dots, and it just leaves iron sight shooters with very difficult target presentations and no real feeling of reward since they're just trying to keep up. I didn't go back to that club, haven't gone back to that state, and haven't shot SS major since.

     

    It's frustrating because if we just had good medium course designs and there wasn't the pressure of "well, people want to shoot, so let's do 5 32 round field courses and a classifier for our club match" I think it would be a different. Ideally, take one bay and break it into two 16 round medium courses. The risk is it'll slow down match flow, but I think it would be worth doing.

  13. 3 hours ago, Racinready300ex said:

    Maybe it would benefit clubs to send new shooters a survey asking what they liked, what they didn't and if they plan to return. The only way to know why that happens really is to ask. 

    I think this is something national HQ should be doing, since match directors are already doing a lot to run their club matches. Obviously, the issue is how to solicit feedback from new shooters if they are not new members, they'd have to find a way to actually contact them. The easiest thing to do would be contact them via Practiscore, but that would require coordination with PS.

     

    It's a good idea still, and it should be investigated, even with some of the hurdles.

  14. I have an MBX 170MM magazine and for a long time, I would only load 28 in the tube for reloads, and could squeeze in a 29th round and the final witness hole in the tube, you would see about half of the round. So, I _know_ that the tube could go to 30 rounds total, but I never tried to force it.

     

    After seeing others be able to fit 30 rounds comfortably, I decided to give it a try at home. I got a fresh spring and follower and used my UpLula to load the magazine. On the 29th round, I then decide d to really fight to get the 30th and was able to successfully load it, with the round now fully in the middle of the final witness hole. It will not insert into my Infinity and lock, however. Also, the round right below the last round loaded gets a bit of a dent in the case from the force.

     

    So, the spring has definitely been conditioned by really forcing that 30th round, because I think I now have 29 reloadable with no issue.

     

    I think I will probably do what @zzt and others have recommended and load it to 30 and leave it for a bit, or keep loading it to 30 over a couple of sessions to get the spring to settle in enough where it will finally allow 30 and insert and lock into the gun.

  15. On 4/21/2023 at 10:11 AM, pskys2 said:

    Well we elected the president AND our AD's.  So I think the process must play out, and that takes time.

     

    There are current Area Directors that have run uncontested in elections. The org is not as democratic as it appears. Historically, there have been multiple instances where multiple Area Directors were up for re-election and ran unopposed.

     

    https://uspsa.org/announcement/301

     

    Quote

    Every three years, each USPSA Area elects new Area Directors on an alternating schedule per the USPSA Bylaws. This year, 2017, Areas 2 and 5 will have elections. Last year, incumbent Area Directors in Areas 4, 6 and 8 all ran unopposed. The deadline to submit your introduction for publication in USPSA's Front Sight Magazine is Feb. 15. This introduction article is limited to 350 words or less. Please include a good color photo of you to accompany your introduction. Additional information regarding the various deadlines for USPSA's Front Sight Magazine can be found in the candidate petition available from the USPSA home office.

     

  16. On 4/19/2023 at 7:15 PM, Rich406 said:

    I’ve had YML as CRO many times over the years, he’s always been a straightforward and standout RO.

     

    the complaint seems way out of character for him.

     

    Agree. This has been my experience as well. YML ran a stage at Puerto Rico and we were in and out of the stage very quickly even with rain delays, and things went very smoothly. This is very suspicious to me, I do not believe the allegations made against him.

  17. Here's a couple pictures from Ch. 12 of The Custom Government Model Pistol by Layne Simpson, that show 1911 single stack frames with optics mounted. Really the only thing you'd need to do is drill and tap the frame for holes, I'd probably go with the standard C-More pattern and just get a mount that will center the optic over the bore, or have spacers made that ensure the optic is centered.

     

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    AMWts8AxKeELtBdp2JXeS8H96X5h8Q45h1C5GeW0

     

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