Therook wrote:Unfortunately there’s too much discussion on rule changes at the moment people are unsure of the class name even.
Those that shoot it have read the rules because they keep changing.
Most clubs are growing because of sporter class please don’t discourage participation we need clubs to grow!
The average age is much lower in sporter than any other discipline but still not too many shooters under 20 in prize meetings or Kings in any discipline,Why?
I suggest leave the rules as is for at least two years let the sport grow.
We abandoned the rules for our club at this stage. The rules are arbitrary and make no sense so we are just planning to let people shoot whatever and do internal club comps.
The hardest part is defining what a sporting rifle is which is why there's so much contention.
I don't think it'd be far of a stretch to say that, in 90% of cases, we would be able to look at a gun and intrinsically know whether it's a field appropriate "modern sporting rifle", but how do you define it. What features make it so?
The other element to this is, it's up for interpretation. Even when it was sporting hunter, people fixated on the hunter part. We know what features make a typical hunting rifle.... but there's a lot of people now that run not what would be typically seen as a hunting rifle even just 20 years ago.
A mate of mine runs a DTA SRS as his deer rifle but when someone says "hunting rifle", that's not what comes to mind. Another mate runs an AXSR in 300nm. Again, that doesn't fit the stereotype.
Personally, i'd just have it no weight limit, no barrel contour specification, 26.5" max length and 25x max mag. Rifle MUST be fired from prone with a bipod and rear bag that complies with the SSRs for Precision Service Rifle and be done with the rules.
We are planning on B grade shooting on TR targets and A grade shooting on F-Class targets to delineate between skill levels. What percentage of success you attain on the TR target to move up to A grade is still in discussion but honestly, I think that's more appropriate a fix.