Thanks to all for your input. I will answers a few of your comments here.
Rick, the APRA starts shooting in April, again next year. Grab an F-class rifle, or sling it with a TR rifle, come shoot a season on electronic targets.
Maybe Rick you should actually shoot some matches so you actually understand where the technology falls short. Imo the technology i have seen from the provinces home range is nowhere near reliable enough to run matches of any meaning on them if they rely on wifi to relay shot info.
Don't worry about my desire or ability to shoot. I concur with the "need" for me to shoot competitively. 3 hip repairs and wore out knees have wore out my hunting passon. I started hand-loading when we bought 4831 in 20 lb. kegs for 20$. Before some of you were born. But to transport shooting gear back and forth across the US/CDN border has a lot of scary stories. I'd probably have to seek political asylum to get back into Canada. Although moving south seeking asylum has crossed my mind. 6.5x47 - you learn the technology real fast when you have to be the 1-800-HELP line for 3 ranges. However, you have a point as in 1 whole season to-date I have not had 1 call to broken "technology". There has been some learning curves at the MD, but that's to be expected.
Someone in this forum talked about the "maturity" of the technology.
Our 3 US ranges have now run 9744 shooters records, for 800 plus shooter, and the targets have not missed a shot, had ghost shots, or gross errors. Not of the shooters are screaming at me or the MD's on the forum's. The MD's are not screaming at me. No one is asking to dumb down rules to fit the technology. In fact the opposite is true. To say nothing of the 7 plus years these targets have been running in Australia on 40 plus clubs. Original targets still in place.
I, for one, would miss doing pit service if the ranges close to me ever adopted the use of E-targets. I'm not interested in getting a match over a couple hours sooner...I actually plan in advance to spend the better part of a day at a match. I'm not interested in looking over at a tablet every time I shoot, I'd rather be paying attention to the conditions.
Ned - you make a point on socializing that used to come up often. However, shooters find E-Targets providing much more socializing on tailgates without having to be concentrated of providing good pit service.
Certification sounds like the government is getting involved, things are going to get exponentially more complex or someone is looking to start a new business at others expense.
John we invesion a process where stakeholders (shooters, vendors, and governing bodies) develop an equitable, scientific, fair, repeatable process to 'qualify' for your confidence. I'd recommend that the testing process configuration initially take place at the same range, with targets side by each, under the same condition. But that would be worked out by the stakeholder/governing body consultations.
On another forum, I was able to ask a second question, about the confidence level with E-Targets. Out of 40 shooters 75% don't have confidence in E-Targets. That's a shame.
However, unless shooters send us a clear message through a process like this, it will remain without principle. And I know people are saying paper and puller don't ..... but in essence they do. The standard is as everyone can see with their own eyes, and thoroughly know. But with E-Target technology, and the physics, most of us lay people are only left subjectively speculating.
I see $10,000 guns on the firing line to say nothing of the rest of the investment, and we're happy with "close"? E-Targets are sophisticated measuring devices! Their limits, and capabilities are easy to objectively access and measure.
So why not! VOTE and send in the letter!