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BayouSlide

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Posts posted by BayouSlide

  1. At our last USPSA shoot, one of the stages was shot where you traveled in an upside down "U". One of the shots was a popper. The shooter hit the popper, but it did not fall. The shooter did not notice. The SO did, and at the end asked the shooter a couple of times if he was through. The shooter said yes.

    If I had yelled "popper!", and the shooter had turned and saw the popper and then shot it, would I have been wrong doing that?

    A.T.

    Yes, that is coaching.

    8.6.1 No assistance of any kind can be given to a competitor during a course

    of fire, except that any Range Officer assigned to a stage may issue

    safety warnings to a competitor at any time. Such warnings will not be

    grounds for the competitor to be awarded a reshoot.

    8.6.2 Any person providing interference or unauthorized assistance to a competitor

    during a course of fire (and the competitor receiving such assistance)

    may, at the discretion of a Range Officer, incur a procedural

    penalty for that stage and/or be subject to Section 10.6.

    Curtis

  2. Remember, you did your most important job, right: safety. Safety first, safety always.

    Scoring mistakes will happen, just do your best and learn from them.

    But you've got the right attitude to make a great RO.

    With experience, the sort of mistakes that occurred will be few and far between for you.

    :cheers:

    Curtis

  3. Gonna miss it this year. Scheduling conflict. At least the conflict is spending 10 days with my bride in Cozumel where we spent our honeymoon 7 years ago. After what we've been though in the last year I owe her big time. A man has to have his priorities straight.

    Our annual battle for the crown in Middle C Production will have to be put on hold 'til next year :cheers:

    Dang these domestic priorities :devil:

    Curtis

  4. At the match this past weekend, Gary Thibodaux said the stages are in the process of being finalized to get the round count where they want it. As a Level II, the stages have to be submitted for approval. So, with everyone in the NROI tied up with the Nationals, I'm assuming it could be the last week of September at the earliest. I'm sure someone will post a more definitive answer when one is available.

    For those who are interested, here's the direct URL for the Gator Classic info on the USPSA Louisiana Section Web site, where the stages will be available once finalized and approved: http://www.lagator.org/lagcinfo.htm

    Curtis

  5. I always do at least 10 charges.

    Same here. I weigh a series of 10 powder drops before making a run of ammo, adjust as necessary, recheck with another series of 10. I look for at least three series of 10 in a row that fall within .1 - .2 of 10X my established charge weight. I'll adjust as necessary if things seem out of whack.

    Then I recheck with another 10 charges after the first 100 rounds before I go to the second tube of primers, just to make sure everything has settled in to where I expect it to be. That makes sure everything is settled in and the average powder drop is where I expect it to be. I check again at the end of the run to make sure it stayed within specs.

    Curtis

  6. I would prefer a walk to the table in order of finish, even though Ive been lucky with random draws. My .02.

    I'm just the opposite. I like the Christmas morning feeling from the random drawing rather than scuttling back and forth along the table, delaying things while trying to decide what to pick. If I get something I don't need, I sell it in the classifieds and get something I do need.

    Curtis

  7. Signed up, Squadded, hotel booked, I'm ready to go!

    Thanks for all the hard work youre putting in! I just started shooting in January and this will be my first major match.

    Irony is that I have a Level two match 2 weeks after. I guess this will be some good practice.

    You picked a great match get your feet wet. It'll be my first Level III as a competitor, as well, then I get to RO "Low Ports for the Whiners". The stage designers have really built some challenging COFs...should separate the men from the boys...which means I'll be wearing short pants by the end of it :lol:

    Curtis

  8. I've gone through a number of products over the last few years and now have pretty much standardized on either SLIP2000 or SLIP EWL for handguns, rifles and shotguns, with a little Slide Glide for Glock connectors, etc. The EWL seems to do a really good job on AR-15s, just like Pat Rogers said it would ;)

    Works for me, YMMV.

    Curtis

  9. Wanted to add one more thing: sometimes stronger isn't better when it comes to springs.

    The mag springs, the recoil spring and the slide velocity all need to be balanced to work in unison for smooth feeding and extraction. And as you found, softer loads can result in slower slide velocity that can cause problems. Making spring changes can cover problems elsewhere...or cause 'em.

    Curtis

  10. FWIW, I have six 10-rd Glock mags for practice, and a big bunch of 17-rounders that I use only for matches.

    The 10-round mag springs have to be replaced about once a year or I'll start getting double feeds. I haven't had a single problem with any of my match mags, some of which are over three years old. When I checked, the oldest have springs that are about a coil or more shorter than brand new springs, but I still don't have problems with them.

    I think, in most people's experience, 10-rounders are a lot more troublesome overall. I know I've had to mix and match followers to get them to work reliably and they are much more sensitive to spring tension...I have at least one mag that will not work perfectly unless the new springs get a little wear on 'em. There's a reason I save them for practice.

    As Flex said, no reason for +10% springs unless you're running the extended basepads.

    Curtis

  11. I took the RTF 17 frame and put it with my G34 top. Works fine. Not sure of its legality for Production. It should be ok-it's the same frame.

    Because it's there is no RTF 34 as an approved model on the USPSA Approved Production Gun List, this sort of mixing and matching is not legal for Production. The RTF17 is on the list now, however.

    Curtis

  12. Not under current rules. Because you have two strings of fire and it is Comstock, it cannot fit the parameters of a Standards, per 1.2.2.1. Check 1.2.2.1 and make a few changes, including round count and/or a mandatory reload, and you could make it a legal Standards stage.

    I can hear the voice of George Jones, who's mentoring me through my CRO course intoning, every time I offer a COF, "What do I have against 1.1.5 (freestyle)?". I had problems because we see courses of fire somewhat like yours at local matches, and even for classifiers that have been grandfathered in, that don't fit the current rulebook. Check the COF design regs in 1.1 and 1.2 carefully and have fun.

    Curtis

  13. So I take it that nobody uses 115 gr? This is the 9 mm ammo that seems to be most available, at least around here.

    And do these differences in weight affect scoring at all, at least for production division?

    All the same diameter. The reason the lightest bullets, the 115 would tend to feel the snappiest is that they have to be loaded to the highest velocity of the three under discussion to make PF.

    I also feel the 147s might take down a popper a little better/faster than the lighter bullets. YMMV.

    Curtis

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