I’m thinking 70s Trailer house green.Sew a thick pile carpet pad on your shoulder, like shag.
I’m thinking 70s Trailer house green.Sew a thick pile carpet pad on your shoulder, like shag.
Shouldn't have to. The assigned scorekeeper should observe for infractions of the rules and refer them to the RO for resolution.So does now the match director need to appoint a committee to police the FTR guys to make sure they’re not “free recoiling“ and if they catch someone doing it show them the exit gate lol. Personally I could care less if they do
What is the best/easiest cam system to attach to a scope? I think for hunting it would be great to go back and review the shots.im gonna attempt to do some benchrest stuff (groundhog shoots) through the scope cam (trigger cam 2.1)
there is a serious lack of content for the benchrest/f class type of shooting to get the younger crowd interested.
triggercam 2.1 is the best one i have seen so far!!!What is the best/easiest cam system to attach to a scope? I think for hunting it would be great to go back and review the shots.
You betchaWell I wonder if some clown is going to try to use their new mini chronograph whilst shooting....![]()
![]()
It should easily lift up out of the front rest without having to turn or manipulate the rifle or without the front rest moving.I've been following this and it seems most of the discussion is around free recoil. I have an area I'm not crystal clear on and that's about the front rest and any "engagement" between fore-end and rest. The bag on my rest can be compressed to contact the sides of the fore-end and create some friction. Does this constitute a violation of 3.2 (a)? I can lift it out and put it back in, but there some friction. How much contact is permissible? How is it measured? Who measures it?
3.2 Rifle Rests(a) F-Class Open Rifle (F-O) - The F-Open rifle may be supported by a front rest bag, which may be fully adjustable for position but may not provide a positive mechanical method for returning the rifle to its prior point of aim from the previous shot. The rest may not mechanically capture the fore-end of the rifle in such a way that does not allow the rifle to be lifted directly up from the rest or to be placed directly down into the rest. Any rest which captures the fore-end of the rifle and that will not allow for the rifle to be lifted directly up from the rest shall be considered to be an attachment.
I don't want to have the free recoil police on me too, so would like to hear from those more in the know.
Your shoulder should be touching the butt plate when the rifle is fired. Free recoil is when there is a space between your shoulder and the butt plate when the rifle is fired, or you are shooting from a position where the rifle is not shouldered i.e. creedmoor shooting positionas someone that is looking at getting into fclass this spring, can someone ELI5 what is free recoil? and how to avoid it to stay within the rules?
thats what i thought, but wanted to be sure, thanksYour shoulder should be touching the butt plate when the rifle is fired. Free recoil is when there is a space between your shoulder and the butt plate when the rifle is fired, or you are shooting from a position where the rifle is not shouldered i.e. creedmoor shooting position
Well put, Matt. It's going to be interesting this week....It should easily lift up out of the front rest without having to turn or manipulate the rifle or without the front rest moving.
This thread is proof that no one or very few people who shoot F-Class have ever read the rulebook. The rules are virtually exactly the same as the rules prior to the release of the new F-Class only rulebook. Free recoil has never been allowed. The F-Class committee mostly just removed all of the F-Class relevant rules from the Highpower Rule book and placed them in this new book.
The new F-Class committee and some other interested parties spent a long day, and sacrificed a weekend out of their lives to go over the highpower rule book line by line and extract the F-Class related rules out of it to make the first edition of the F-Class rule book. I think it is comical that people are getting up in arms about rules that were present well before they even knew the sport of F-Class existed, and it took the release of an F-Class only rulebook for them to even realize that there is in fact a rulebook.
It should easily lift up out of the front rest without having to turn or manipulate the rifle or without the front rest moving.
This thread is proof that no one or very few people who shoot F-Class have ever read the rulebook. The rules are virtually exactly the same as the rules prior to the release of the new F-Class only rulebook. Free recoil has never been allowed. The F-Class committee mostly just removed all of the F-Class relevant rules from the Highpower Rule book and placed them in this new book.
The new F-Class committee and some other interested parties spent a long day, and sacrificed a weekend out of their lives to go over the highpower rule book line by line and extract the F-Class related rules out of it to make the first edition of the F-Class rule book. I think it is comical that people are getting up in arms about rules that were present well before they even knew the sport of F-Class existed, and it took the release of an F-Class only rulebook for them to even realize that there is in fact a rulebook.
It should easily lift up out of the front rest without having to turn or manipulate the rifle or without the front rest moving.
This thread is proof that no one or very few people who shoot F-Class have ever read the rulebook. The rules are virtually exactly the same as the rules prior to the release of the new F-Class only rulebook. Free recoil has never been allowed. The F-Class committee mostly just removed all of the F-Class relevant rules from the Highpower Rule book and placed them in this new book.
The new F-Class committee and some other interested parties spent a long day, and sacrificed a weekend out of their lives to go over the highpower rule book line by line and extract the F-Class related rules out of it to make the first edition of the F-Class rule book. I think it is comical that people are getting up in arms about rules that were present well before they even knew the sport of F-Class existed, and it took the release of an F-Class only rulebook for them to even realize that there is in fact a rulebook.
That's funny right there, I don't care who you are!... F class was developed for guys that couldn't sling up anymore, not for BR guys that fell down off the bench and decided to shoot instead of getting back up .