PeteFox wrote:BATattack wrote:
Your rite Brad. It would be good to keep it to one class but how do you keep the poachers out while also keeping it cost effective and still have the door open for a person who does have a modified rifle but isn't anywhere near FO level.
Like I mentioned before we are really talking about rules that effect people that haven't even been to a range yet so it's not like they are on the forum advocating for themselves.
If this is really about growing members, then why not limit to new members (some sort of timeframe here). Shooters coming from F Open to shoot SH really makes a mockery of the intent. This takes away nearly all the discussion about gear and puts it back to the shooter.
FO shooters have the option of PSR.
Pete
While the original intent WAS about bringing in new members, it has done that. We (the NRAA Community) now need to be looking at developing the discipline and I would have reservations about excluding ,,, well pretty much any one. Let's not forget that despite political opinion Australia literally dominates full bore shooting globally. Those who have shot long range KNOW, unequivocally, that winning requires wind reading. You can have a gun that can shoot less than x ring elevation all day and still lose against a 6 ring gun with someone who can hold laterally. I am sure that PRS already know this, so exactly who is new? New to NRAA or new to shooting?
There were no such exclusions with any of the F classes, in fact they were born of a need to give TR shooters (very experienced wind readers) somewhere to go when they could no longer shoot peep. There was nothing, however, stopping a capable TR shooter adopting F Class, and many did.
I believe the rules themselves need to distinguish this class in the same way the rules distinguish TR, and the F classes. Essentially, it's FTR with no caliber restriction. Many seem to thing the joypod offers some magical accuracy improvement. It doesn't, well the coax bit doesn't, the skis do. The coax simply allows for faster 'target acquisition'. Great for team shooting, not entirely necessary for individuals. Hence the still successful non coax bipods. The skis, they make a difference. I'd be happy to shoot my ftr rig in SH off a folding bipod with skis, on a front plate/mat and supported with a Seb big foot. I used to use an MPod which, while rigid and very cheap, offered nothing a Harris doesn't except the skis, which allow free recoil.
My personal opinion is that the rules need to prevent this, either by weight, rifle production, cost, rear bag restrictions, front plate elimination, or some other method. It needs to be different enough so any experienced long range shooter is taking little more than wind reading skills with them.
Shooting in Australia is competitive, like really competitive. We currently hold world Championship golds in TR, FO and silver in FTR. Whilst many have heard of our worthy American adversaries, who outside the NRAA have heard of Marty Lobert or Rod Davis ?
If people want to shoot, by all means come and shoot, but if they want to compete they had better aspire to being the very best, because that is who they are up against. If you take that away, what exactly is the point?