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Piney

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Posts posted by Piney

  1. On 11/30/2016 at 3:25 PM, MemphisMechanic said:

    Mine is plugged in all the time. A cheap little Lyman.

    On the bench next to the press. Your bench is bolted to the wall, right? If not, do so immediately.

    My bench weighs over 150lbs and is hell for stout. Lagging it into a stud at either end was still a revolution in press operation.

    I agree--   Two lag screws on the back of the frame into the wall studs made a noticeable difference in the case loader operation on my 650.

    I haven't noticed a problem with the scale where it sits in easy reach on the bench. As.Sarge said-- watch the air currents.  I do notice that the readout changes if I forget and leave the ceiling fan on med. or high.

     

  2. I've shot a lot of competive skeet and faced this issue big time. It has ruined numerous good scores and produced disastrous performance in shootoffs. Several years ago a dear friend who is retired military, former member of the MTU at Ft Benning, a 2650 NRA bullseye shooter and a member of two Olympic teams shooting Rapid Fire Pistol offered some advice. His two sons are also 2600 bullseye shooters and one shot Rapid Fire Pistol in the 1996 Olympics (background provided to demonstrate that he has something to offer). He said "Match pressure is nothing but dumb thinking. It's thinking about the result before the match is over. The only thing that matters is the technique." Following his advice worked for me. It turned off match pressure like flipping a switch. I haven't experienced it since. YMMV.

    Great stuff!

    I've taken this advice-- not worrying about the result (ie the scores...). For example, unless its a major match, I rarely even walk the targets to score them. I get a feel how I did (both good and poorly) and that's good so I dont worry about the proverbial "making up the points on the next stage..." thoughts.

  3. If there's a line of people waiting to use the safe area and your there for xx min warming up your doing it wrong. Its nothing to do with the rules. It's just basic common courtesy.

    Exactly, and if you're at a major match that's what the sight in / warm up bay is for.

    Do many matches have a warm up bay ? I've been to several state level matches and have never seen one. Great idea, BTW

  4. I have a small shop vac. It has a long hose so the motor/tank sits out of the way. . I started using a brush tool. That helped--still picked up powder and small debris as planned. But, it still tended to suck up pins on occasion. I cut a small slot in the head to reduce the suction some. I can run the brush across the shell plate area--pick up the loose powder but leave the pins.

    .

  5. I ordered 8# jugs of Titegroup and W231 from Gamaliel mid November 2014. I received email last Monday that the TG I ordered was in. I called to confirm and it actually was ! The 231 wasnt though.

    It was $129/jug so that's up about $5-8 from earlier 2014 prices. This new stash plus what I had before will last a couple of yrs.

  6. Got the replacement from Dillon. No wonder folks say it comes apart and I couldnt figure out how. The "new" one has an alen head part that the original one I have didnt. I'll find out if it come apart after the next 6-7k and it needs cleaning.

    C-Clip wasnt tough. I put it in a small vice, pressing the tip of the punch and the edge of the c-clip cup. The clip loosens and easy to get off and back on.

  7. Does the 650 primer punch really dissemble for cleaning ?

    Dirt/dust gets into the fitting and wont let it re-seat fully-- causing the primer wheel to stick and not rotate easily.

    I see cleaning one is mentioned here and there. I've tried spraying cleaner and working it in and out - no luck. I can get the c-clip and spring off with only two hands :-) But, I'm unable to get the pin out. Should I wack it with a hammer and punch ? Or does it simply just not come out , thus requiring a new assy ?

  8. I'll agree with the comments about don't change much in one's diet just to prepare for a match. If you eat a big breakfast usually, drink a large coffee, etc-- keep that part of the prep stable.

    For example, if you don't usually consume a large amt of fluid and caffeine, and you decide to do so the morning of a match, you may be spending time in the restroom, and by doing that dehydrate, thus feeling "different' that usual.

    I am used to being able to snack a little between meals, so I bring peanuts or granola-type snacks for a touch of carbs/energy. I also drink water during the day, so make it a point to drink a bottle or so at each stage.

    I try to keep things the same-- I get up at 0500 as usual, eat something as usual, cuss at the traffic as usual--and still shoot only fair--as usual.

  9. At a recent match, we were discussing if that ability to see the next two shooters was available and perhaps we didnt know about it.

    Thanks for the confirm, slowsure. I'm working with Russell on the issue as he's already issued 1 beta to fix it.

    BTW, I'm new to the process so was just wondering, do you guys submit new feature requests to the same support email? It would be really nice if you could see the next 2 shooters, the on-deck and in-the-hole spots, while you're on the scoring screen. It's very common to be in the middle of scoring someone and have a shooter ask, 'who's next?' and 'who's after that?'. Maybe it could go in the top right corner. Right now, you have to complete scoring and back out to the shooter list screen to see that info.

  10. I'd be happy to just recover what I've shot at t match. It's become such a big deal at some matches I've shot at, I usually just leave it alone.

    People almost getting into arguments, 2-3 people roaming around downrange pecking at the brass while we all wait, lack of folks taping/resetting targets because they're pecking at the brass, folks not helping to tear down, etc etc.

    Loss brass matches aren't too bad of an idea, IMO. One group I know of collects their brass as a club, then sells it by the bucket from a list of interested members-- once its your turn you get to buy a bucket, then go to the bottom of the list. Another group lets the SO's have access to the brass first-- a perk for taking their time. Yet another collects the brass and anyone a member get a baggie full of mixed at the end of the match once its torn down. That's a perk for those staying to help.

  11. Replacing the original A2 style muzzle brake on my RRA.

    I understand that one tightens to 20-25ftlbs (good and snug...) them adjusts further to get it oriented properly.

    The new brake is a good 270 degrees off orientation once torqued- I doubt it will turn that far. I'd be afraid that I'd strip the threads.

    The original is about 90 degrees off when tight and will sung up that far to orientate properly

    I tried the original plus new crush ring-- that sets it at 180 degrees off-- still concerned about that much turning once tight

    Suggestions-- ? Thicker crush ring from somewhere ?

  12. My comment is get the 650-

    I read a number of folks comment on not using the 650 if you change calibers often- a bit expensive to have set up tool heads and some time to change other parts, adjust etc I assume. I don't change mine. It's 9mm all the time.

    First press comments--It was my first progressive. It can be a little daunting to set up and get running for the first time. Ask around where you shoot, read here and watch YouTube videos. Go slow at first. Also, as you'll read-- no distractions (kids, wife, tv).

    With regards to cost-- it's an investment. It will run run run and Dillon stands behind it 100 %

    Take some time in figuring out a bench and mounting. It needs to be really solid ! Lots of info here on benches, too.

  13. Ive notited when I get tired of shooting * yes.. I did actually say that* my concentration suffers. I get lazy-- kinda of half hearted with my accuracy. I also notice that I fall into bad habits-- poor grip, trigger etc. When I can really tell is when my "gaming" suffers.

    Several have mentioned a frustration level increasing. Folks express their frustration with not scoring better, not shooting better than so and so, etc. To me, if I notice a constant level of that, it means its become work and not a fun sport. That's not often. I keep the frustration level pretty low. Some frusrtration is good-- keeps one on their toes. One has to decide when that crosses their own line.

    I've found that for me its time to simply take a break. Others mention the similar- take a break for a bit and come back refreshed. Fiddle with somthing else for a while. I still see my shooting buddies and will stop by a match-- but not shoot. After a few weeks or so, time to go shoot at a match will become available and I'll start up again.

  14. I've hit a bit of a plateau. I compare my scores with a few of the same folks that I've shot with for a while. Some are same clasification, others are higher Over the past doz or so matches, I've noticed my scoring is quite similar but my raw times are where the scores differ. I roughly calculate that on each taget in a stage, I average 3/4 of to a second or so slower-- .75 x the 30 vvvvvvvpp targets total for the match for example is close to the dif in total score. I understand there are other factors-- draw, moving etc-- but I use this as a concrete measurement.

    At the time, I feel Im shooting about as fast as I am able to still maintain good scores. I can shoot faster but I typically find the score suffers, depending on the distance,

    I'm leaning towards removing some of the raw time by a faster draw and better reloads. This SROM (slightly rotund old man...) aint going to move much faster LOL.

    So-- question is-- concentrate to reduce time per target (faster shooting, faster acquisition) or concentrate on removing the time elsewhere ? Several have suggested work on the shooting as that provides a more consistant increase across the targets, where as moving/reloads don't always apply as heavily, depending in the stage design

  15. First rule for a happy marriage - NEVER try to teach your wife to drive or shoot. If you have a friend who is good, or a good local trainer have her learn with them.

    Best decision we made-- wife took a couple of small group classes with two different trainers. No arguing and she listened *grin*

    Dry fire helped her see what she was doing, both well and only slightly incorrectly *glancing over shoulder as I type*

  16. Not I....I work for a completely different company....I was actually trying to get hired by my customer....their "Advanced Technical Support" will get no more technical support from me...Good enough to call when the SHTF and nobody else can fix it, but not good enough to hire.

    So the guy who will be taking the job you wanted at this other company... you will be forced to interact/"interface" with him?

    Interesting...

    Sounds like somebody just handed you lemons. Time to make some lemonade.

    Yes, I will be interacting with them. Yes, I will have to help train them. No, I won't be able to get out of it or say no.

    Ahh-- but you can say "yes" soooooooo slowly.

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