I think this needs to be said.
It has long been accepted through a "Gentlemen's Agreement" that if a target scored in the pits is perceived to be incorrectly marked as a different value that where the spotter is visibly located, if the scorekeeper and shooter agree on the value then the agreed upon value is placed on the scorecard and shooting continues. While yes this has been unofficially accepted as a process to deal with the situation, it is actually incorrect.
Over the past few years I have been seeing this take place, but it has become more and more abused. Such instances I have seen is where a shooter and scorekeeper call for a mark because they didn't see the target go down, and then the target comes up with a miss. In this situation the shooter and scorekeeper assumed they missed the target being pulled and because the previous score was an X the scorekeeper gave the shooter an X for that shot. Other instances have included the shooter and scorekeeper determine that the marked value of the shot was incorrect and gave a different value on the scorecard when the spotter was located close to a value line.
With more and more new shooters participating in the sport and seeing these situations happen they are believing that it is in fact the correct process, when in fact it is not. No where in the rule book does it say that the scorekeeper can change the score of the value marked by the pits. In fact according to 14.3.1 the scorekeeper is an official of the match, and in 14.16 "No erasures are allowed on score cards... When targets are scored in the pits, the recorded value of any shot will not be changed (except when re-disked or re-marked) unless some special message with reference to it is received by a Range Official from one of the Pit Officials."
This means that if the shooter and/or scorekeeper do not agree with the value of the shot marked by the pits the correct process is to challenge the value of the shot or ask a line official to call to the pits to have the target re-disked.
It has long been accepted through a "Gentlemen's Agreement" that if a target scored in the pits is perceived to be incorrectly marked as a different value that where the spotter is visibly located, if the scorekeeper and shooter agree on the value then the agreed upon value is placed on the scorecard and shooting continues. While yes this has been unofficially accepted as a process to deal with the situation, it is actually incorrect.
Over the past few years I have been seeing this take place, but it has become more and more abused. Such instances I have seen is where a shooter and scorekeeper call for a mark because they didn't see the target go down, and then the target comes up with a miss. In this situation the shooter and scorekeeper assumed they missed the target being pulled and because the previous score was an X the scorekeeper gave the shooter an X for that shot. Other instances have included the shooter and scorekeeper determine that the marked value of the shot was incorrect and gave a different value on the scorecard when the spotter was located close to a value line.
With more and more new shooters participating in the sport and seeing these situations happen they are believing that it is in fact the correct process, when in fact it is not. No where in the rule book does it say that the scorekeeper can change the score of the value marked by the pits. In fact according to 14.3.1 the scorekeeper is an official of the match, and in 14.16 "No erasures are allowed on score cards... When targets are scored in the pits, the recorded value of any shot will not be changed (except when re-disked or re-marked) unless some special message with reference to it is received by a Range Official from one of the Pit Officials."
This means that if the shooter and/or scorekeeper do not agree with the value of the shot marked by the pits the correct process is to challenge the value of the shot or ask a line official to call to the pits to have the target re-disked.