Bryan Litz Ballistics
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Some thoughts for consideration...
http://appliedballisticsllc.com/Articles/Etargets.pdf
-Bryan
http://appliedballisticsllc.com/Articles/Etargets.pdf
-Bryan
SWRichmond said:Bryan,
Congrats on winning FCNC! And thanks for your thoughtful article.
I've been working with electronic equipment since 1975. If electronic targets were unquestionably accurate, precise, and reliable, there still would remain serious questions as to their adoption in competition. One of those principal questions of course is my inability to see the results of others' shots, and the opportunity to glean information from those. This in itself dramatically changes the nature of the game. Often I will wait during what I believe is a change, targets will come up and I will think to myself "uh huh, didn't you guys see that?". Or, almost as often, targets will come up and I will think "hmmm, not what I thought". I know it all depends on who is near to you, but it matters. During the Bridgeville regional match a guy named Bill shot during a really wicked change and I thought "Jeezus, you shot in that?" It came up a ten, and I was suitably impressed. For real. It makes me wonder what he saw that I didn't. And that's a learning opportunity which I'd be denied by the use of electronic targets.
But in relation to their individual use, I still have lots of questions regarding electronic targets.
It seems to me that the issues surrounding scoring on electronic targets are related to the difference between what you are shooting at and what the score result is. In essence, we are shooting at a visual image (a real target) but we are receiving a score based on an unseen and unseeable electronic image superimposed upon the real target. There is no way for us to assess the validity of this image in real time. We are forced to simply trust it.
Being electronic equipment, even if each set of equipment meets some calibration standard, some sets will be more precise than others. I can easily envision all sorts of scenarios where this is really bad, including the very real opportunity to change the outcome of a match deliberately merely by someone who is familiar with the performance of known equipment choosing which set of gear gets installed on which target. You have pointed out the very real variances in paper targets, a point which could and should be addressed by ensuring that each competitor fires on targets from the same batch. But with electronics, there is no way to verify this. The MD will simply say "it meets cal so it's good to go".
Do electronic targets continuously cal? Are they cal checked before and after each string? Can competitors request a cal check during a match? What is the known electronic drift over time? What is their performance variation due to temperature, rain, snow? How will a MD determine if a unit has suddenly gone out of cal during a match, say, the nationals?
I am not dead set against the use of electronic targets. The enhanced real-time visual appeal of the sport would be a boon to its popularity, and that would be awesome! But I have a lot of concerns which I'd love to see discussed and addressed in some public forum (like this one). Thanks for getting that discussion started! I am kind of assuming that was the purpose of your post.
johara1 said:Shame on you if you don't hold on to the carrier…. you can feel the hit on the target, they should have seen a hole or part of a hole in the spotter. As far as electronic targets do they show a cross fire on your target? ……… jim
JamesnTN said:Do E targets show some sort of impact? Say you shoot a 10 will it show if it was a high 10 or low or right or left? Just curious if it marks the hole in relation to a spotter in paper?
aj300mag said:JamesnTN said:Do E targets show some sort of impact? Say you shoot a 10 will it show if it was a high 10 or low or right or left? Just curious if it marks the hole in relation to a spotter in paper?
Yes they show POI. Screen shot from our demo match...
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Rule 14.3 deals with scoring. There is no longer a "30 caliber rule". Today the rule is basically you get the hole you shoot.Bryan Litz said:Some thoughts for consideration...
http://appliedballisticsllc.com/Articles/Etargets.pdf
-Bryan