I am the Match Director that initiated the conversations with the NRA and the email was part of a long chain of emails. I do not feel compelled to add any more fuel to this fire Please note that it is well within the purvey of the Match Director to invoke a rule for a competition as long as it is cleared with the NRA and does not rebuke, or is in conflict with an existing rule.
It is my hope that we can come to an agreement on a rule that covers this issue that is more exacting and will create less back and forth. I have seen suggestions that would be better in addressing this issue and would leave less room for subjectiveness on behalf of the observer.
On page 6 of this blog, I made a statement to the effect "if you want to prove to others that you don't have groove tracking on your mind, and you want to prove that to yourself also, just turn the carpet over, pile down". It should be a surface that performs in the spirit of F-TR.
In my email reply to Peter after reading the email from the NRA, one of the things I suggested to do...and this would be for any carpet pile type...is to try this experiment with skate-blade bipod feet: Turn the skate-blade feet on the bipod legs so that the skates run perpendicularly to the line of recoil. If the shooter's experience is not unlike when the feet run with the line of recoil, and he is willing to shoot this style bipod thereafter (especially on fluffable carpet), obviously he does not have even a whimsical bit of groove tracking on his mind, and we don't have a groove tracking concern.
I can assure you this, there would be no problem with that style "feet" orientation on the mat that I used in F-TR (See page 10).
Dan
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