Yes the shooter is key as well. Sure the gun must be as good as they get but in this case, the shooter plays a major role. I'm not that guy. No matter how much practice, most will never even get close.I can't even imagine it, let alone believe it. Ive only done 2 or 3 with my rifle (several with a friend's rifle) at 100yds
A zero group at 1000 can be .999 of a inchHow would you verify 5 shots in a .0 group at 1,000 yards?
This is currently the problem many people are running into at 600 yards. The groups are getting so small that people are accidently getting DQ’d with “4 on” it won’t be long and we will have to go to a rolling backer or shot markers for verification.How would you verify 5 shots in a .0 group at 1,000 yards?
There was a huge discussion about this a few years ago on this forum.This is currently the problem many people are running into at 600 yards. The groups are getting so small that people are accidently getting DQ’d with “4 on” it won’t be long and we will have to go to a rolling backer or shot markers for verification.
I agree, unfortunately not everyone is that way. I’ve seen it myself and seen targets get challenged and still lose even though it’s clear there’s a double. Also some refs need to understand that in that scoring shed you’re an unbiased party for that time and not a competitor. I’ve also seen this happen…Shooter ALWAYS gets the benefit of the doubt when the group is really small whenever I had the honor to be one of the judges.
A zero group would be .099 or less? Either way a Shotmarker would tell you how many shots and where they are. Maybe 600/1,000 BR shooters should start heading that way.A zero group at 1000 can be .999 of a inch
No at 100 that would be but at 1000 a zero group is under one inch.A zero group would be .099 or less? Either way a Shotmarker would tell you how many shots and where they are. Maybe 600/1,000 BR shooters should start heading that way.
Unfortunately, guys occasionally only shoot 4 or they shoot 6 because they lost count.Is there a need for a verifier to ensure competitors actually fire 5 shots?
I know a couple guys who quit when their record-setting targets were DQed. When I score, shooter always gets the benefit of the doubt. This is a gentlemanly sport. There’s no massive prize pot or money on the line beyond the entry fees, and arguably even if there was - this is a game we’re playing together and we should act with honesty and integrity and accept that others are doing the same.I had this situation happen to me at a 600 yard match. I always lay 5 rounds out when shooting for score so I don’t lose count. After the relay the pits radioed back I had 4 hits. I’m looking at 5 empty brass on the towel. I told the RO I had fired 5 rounds. When scored I was penalized for only 4 shots scored. One of the bullet holes was slightly out of round. Everyone that has looked at the target agreed it’s a doubler, which means 5 shots. My other 3 targets that day all had 5 shots on them. Didn’t protest because I was not in contention for the win. That target hangs in my office. I know what I shot that day and it was a 50 and 2X. Don’t care what the score keeper says. Like another gentleman said earlier, you don’t put 4 rounds in a small group and then miss the entire target. Mine were all inside the 10 ring.
A Shotmarker could be set up to count the shots on target. It will tell you how many bullets went past the sensors. The scores from the paper targets could still be used.Unfortunately, guys occasionally only shoot 4 or they shoot 6 because they lost count.