Like others, I heard rumours of a particular make / model of scope failing at Raton, but it wasn't any Nightforce model. The only scope I actually saw fail was a good old NXS as used by the South African F/TR team in the 1,000 yard Day 1 Teams' Match #3. The shooter got 'Ones' at 3 o-clock for shots 7 to 9 and the scope apparently wouldn't respond to windage adjustments. A replacement rifle + NXS was substituted after discussion / agreement with the Line Officer. I do wonder if the scope has self-rectified on its return home to cooler conditions.
I shot the whole fortnight at 20-24X on my scope and while my elevations were generally good, I'd get spells where they'd deteriorate. At that scope magnification setting, I'd see four to six other targets alongside my own, and I'd invariably see the same problems (usually high shots) on others' targets alongside while the condition persisted. I must admit, I'd never even have considered thinking I had a scope problem for an elevation condition in these conditions.
I used a Stolle Atlas; pretty well common or garden Timney trigger which was trouble-free and performed superbly with a very clean release; 32-inch Broughton Heavy Palma profile barrel, 1-10 inch twist 5C rifling; Joe West F-Class stock (similar shallow long forend to the P R & T Low-Boy); Sightron Series III 8-32X56 LRMOA scope, and Dan Pahlobel's FLEX-Pod bi-pod. I also brought a SEB Joy-Pod with me to Raton, but tried the FLEX first as I reckoned it'd be better suited to a rough dirt firing line. It (the FLEX) performed so well sitting on a quarter of a $5 rubber backed carpeted car floor-mat set that I never assembled the Joy-Pod.
Ammo was Lapua Palma brass, CCI-BR4 primer, 155.5gn Berger BT Fullbore, IMR-8208 XBR, a combination which produced single-figure ES values.
Of particular interest in the equipment race v results stakes, lie our (GB F/TR team) two wind coaches' (Jane Messer and Paul Kent) rifles. Neither was an F-Class competitor when recruited to the role (Target / Palma Rifle experts) and were provided with the GB F-Class Association's two spare rifles used mainly on 'Come and Shoot F/TR' sessions on occasions like our NRA's national shooting days when Bisley is thrown open to members of the public.
Both were built by top Brit 'Effer' Mik Maksimovic (not Maksimovia as listed in the FCWC results) who is the man behind The Dolphin Gun Company, almost entirely from spare parts and are basically what I believe you guys in the US refer to as 'POS'! Spec is:
old Musgrave RSA Mauser 98 type actions, ex Target Rifle from the 1970s / 80s and still marked 7.62mm.
Recovered heavy profile 32-inch Bartlein barrels.
Recovered and very nondescript stocks, Jane Messer's being a left-hand ex TR stock modified for a RH action to fit, but retaining the left-hand buttstock comb while she is RH!
Original Musgrave triggers still set above the ICFRA TR / Palma 1.5 kg minimum pull weight, ie c. 3.5-4lb.
Sightron SIII 8-32X56 LRTD scopes on Third Eye mounts.
Various secondhand first-generation bi-pods, Jane's rifle using a very light Fito Light-Force as we had BIG trouble making weight with the other bits.
If this pair of rifles were put on the UK market, they'd struggle to realise £500, more likely a lot less, putting the scopes to one side which are worth more than the other bits combined. ie they're $400-500 rifles in US money.
Paul Kent had the highest score in the US Nationals Match #2 with his POS, and had a very good day 1 in the FCWC Individual matches, but suffered on day 2, this subsequently discovered as being down to loose action bolts and was disappointed to only (ONLY !?) come 35th overall F/TR.
Jane took 30th overall F/TR in the individuals with her POS.
It's what we always say, but rather not believe - once a rifle and its ammo shoot well enough in this discipline, the user's wind reading skills count for far more than the smokepole's specification and whether group sizes can be reduced to the very last 0.1-MOA,
Laurie Holland