shooting together and the Super V
Posted: Mon Oct 19, 2009 9:52 am
At our picnic shoot on Saturday The Wodonga Rifle Club trialled using the Super V target centres downloaded from the SA Rifle Association website.
The markers scored them for all classes of shooting using a white spotter for the super v, red for V, white for 5 and red for the rest.
We use the wand system for indicating the value so we used a white wand in front of the aiming mark for the super v while the rest were indicated as usual.
On the cards the super v was scored as an X in all classes, including target rifle.
In F open and F standard the central as scored as a 6, giving both the perfect score of 60.10.
Having the same scoring system for all classes meant we only had to make one lot of targets.
It also meant scorers were not confused by different scoring systems.
This meant everyone shot together – eliminating the “us and them” mentality I see creeping into our sport.
While the X score for target rifle shooters means nothing to their end score it does give shooters an idea about how they are grouping.
And the most super v's shot over the thee ranges (700, 900 and 900) was 13 by the winner of the target rifle division, John McDiarmid who shot 150.23. The top score in F open as Wayne MacFarlane's 174.8 and in F standard Phil Jonker shot 175.9. The most super v's shot in F class was 12 by Bruce Kneebone who entered F standard on Saturday (those last 2 shots at 900 hurt, Bruce!).
My view is the system worked a treat.
As I have said it means less work making targets which has to be a bonus for the few of us left to do this work.
It also keeps us all together which should be encouraged. At the moment F standard and target rifle shoot side by side with F Open left on the outer. While I have noticed some F open shooters like to left to their own devices I reckon the more we mix together the more we will all come to realise we really do have so much in common.
I will watch developments on this issue with some interest
kend
The markers scored them for all classes of shooting using a white spotter for the super v, red for V, white for 5 and red for the rest.
We use the wand system for indicating the value so we used a white wand in front of the aiming mark for the super v while the rest were indicated as usual.
On the cards the super v was scored as an X in all classes, including target rifle.
In F open and F standard the central as scored as a 6, giving both the perfect score of 60.10.
Having the same scoring system for all classes meant we only had to make one lot of targets.
It also meant scorers were not confused by different scoring systems.
This meant everyone shot together – eliminating the “us and them” mentality I see creeping into our sport.
While the X score for target rifle shooters means nothing to their end score it does give shooters an idea about how they are grouping.
And the most super v's shot over the thee ranges (700, 900 and 900) was 13 by the winner of the target rifle division, John McDiarmid who shot 150.23. The top score in F open as Wayne MacFarlane's 174.8 and in F standard Phil Jonker shot 175.9. The most super v's shot in F class was 12 by Bruce Kneebone who entered F standard on Saturday (those last 2 shots at 900 hurt, Bruce!).
My view is the system worked a treat.
As I have said it means less work making targets which has to be a bonus for the few of us left to do this work.
It also keeps us all together which should be encouraged. At the moment F standard and target rifle shoot side by side with F Open left on the outer. While I have noticed some F open shooters like to left to their own devices I reckon the more we mix together the more we will all come to realise we really do have so much in common.
I will watch developments on this issue with some interest
kend