ErikW Posted January 6, 2003 Share Posted January 6, 2003 When you see wood chips flying when you take a shot, make that shot up. Period. "I'm a lumberjack and I'm OK." Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Loves2Shoot Posted January 6, 2003 Share Posted January 6, 2003 LOL, that is a good one Erik. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
benos Posted January 7, 2003 Share Posted January 7, 2003 That's a good one Erik! I remember John Shaw making one (of his many) classic statements, one year after getting smoked in a (steel) shoot-off bout - "Man, all I saw was dirt clods flying up everywhere - it looked like World War III out there." Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
EricW Posted January 7, 2003 Share Posted January 7, 2003 Whew! Before I read the thread, I thought I was going to have to dress up like a lumberjack.... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rich Bagoly Posted January 7, 2003 Share Posted January 7, 2003 I go by wood flying = a "D" hit. A "D" is a miss you got away with. Unless its cover. At last years AWARE, one of the stages had hard cover pine trees. I called "A","C" on the second target, and moved on to the next. I saw wood fly. Thought must have been "D", don't go back. Shoot the rest of the stage as the idea is slowly grinding around in the back of my head, It was a TREE, not a "D". Spun back and made up the shot. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ErikW Posted January 7, 2003 Author Share Posted January 7, 2003 You're right Rich, wood flying off the target is a D hit (and worthy of a makeup unless Viriginia count). However, I was thinking of wood props. I just can't believe how much wood deflects the bullets from their original path to the taret. Sunday I grazed a vision barrier, saw wood fly, and continued. That target was an Alpha-Mike. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Detlef Posted January 7, 2003 Share Posted January 7, 2003 probably the deflected shot being the A Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lynn jones Posted January 7, 2003 Share Posted January 7, 2003 a buddy of mine shot a match last sunday, his shots were deflected into a "no shoot" 4 times!!! he was not happy. lynn jones Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lynn jones Posted January 7, 2003 Share Posted January 7, 2003 rich & erik, if you saw wood fly off a target stand, you still wouldn't shoot it again? did you forget about that little space beyond the dotted line? lynn Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
A33435 Posted January 7, 2003 Share Posted January 7, 2003 We have some unstable standards for the papertargets and when you hit the wood of the standard the target will flutter in a particular way. The movement of the paper and flying wood is defenitely a reason for placing an extra shot. Otherwise the score would be A, D if your are lucky or A, W(oody) is you have bad luck. Greetings Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ErikW Posted January 8, 2003 Author Share Posted January 8, 2003 Ohhhh, man that's harsh!!!! Detlef, is it Friday already? Lynn, I said it's worthy of a make up shot. A33435, a fluttering target is good indicator. Sometimes wood chips don't fly but the targets flutter. A "W" is just an upside-down "M". Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IPSC CHIK1 Posted January 8, 2003 Share Posted January 8, 2003 you're a lumberjack and you're ok. ok. who REALLY remembers the monty python skit? ROFLMLWAO DVC SharonAnne L2387 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jhgtyre Posted January 9, 2003 Share Posted January 9, 2003 I would vote in favor of the makeup shot. IPSC CHIK1, I have two neices at NAU (Home of the LUMBERJACKS) and neither of them know the song! -ld Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mcoliver Posted January 9, 2003 Share Posted January 9, 2003 (flamesuiton) You saw the wood fly but you didn't see the A before the shot?...tsk..tsk Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ErikW Posted January 9, 2003 Author Share Posted January 9, 2003 More thoughts... Shooting iron sights, you're more apt to notice lumberjacking close props/vision barriers because your focus is near your muzzle. (And maybe less apt to be chopping wood because you might see the prop better.) But you're less apt to notice wood flying from target stands. Shooting a dot sight, you're focused on the target and less apt to see the prop in your way and the lumberjacking going on. Fortunately, you've got "wider" vision and you may see the wood chips and sawdust blow out toward the target. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Wildman Posted January 11, 2003 Share Posted January 11, 2003 Remember the skit? It was our official theme song at Barton House, UMC. If you can’t remember draft number parties, you are probably out of luck. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BSeevers Posted January 11, 2003 Share Posted January 11, 2003 Reminds me of a big match I shot. Popper was about 12 yards downrange partially behind a wall from where I shot it. I shot it through the wall, by accident, and at the end the RO says MISS. I said its down how can it be miss? He said your hole shows you shot it through the wall. I said how could I make it up if its already down so it must be range equipment failure. After much MD discussion, reshoot. Moral of story, don't put steel partially behind wood Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mcginnes Posted January 24, 2003 Share Posted January 24, 2003 Seems to me like the wall was "soft cover," and the moral of the story is: wood cover isn't good cover. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bill Posted January 25, 2003 Share Posted January 25, 2003 For some of our stages, we put steel behind a wood wall but in front of the target. That made the wall real hard cover. The steel has a hole in it. We put a bolt through the steel then put a coil spring between the wall and the steel hard cover. The spring makes it ring like a bell when hit. When you hear the sound of the gong you know you hit the hard cover instead of the target behind it. We have a rule for hard cover at some of our matches. If the bullet gets through it then I guess it isn't hard cover. Bill Nesbitt Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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