coondogkid
Member
Is'nt it 250, then the most X, then the most wipe outs?
Is'nt it 250, then the most X, then the most wipe outs?
To expand on what Greg said which is correct, counting of wipeouts is not authorized for range level scoring in IBS. Something I read on another thread leads me to believe David Halblom got NBRSA to reconsider the counting of wipeouts for next year as well. Counting wipeouts is a very subjective thing IMO not reliably done at range level. Just look at how many 250-25x targets are submitted each year in IBS and less than half are certified as actually 25x.Wipe outs, in the IBS score game, are not used to break yardage or agg ties. If there are two 250-25X's shot in lets say a 100 yard match, then there is a tie for 1st place. Wipeouts are only used to determine if a 250-25X record is broken. A 250-25X record is based on wipeouts. --Greg
Are the VFS rules and the hunter class rules the same?
I was not aware that the NBRSA rules accept counting wipeouts as a tie breaker method. My apologies.
It doesn't matter to me whether we use Creedmore or wipeout rules, but I have been scoring Hunter Rifle and VFS targets since 1979...and my opinion is the wipeout is easier to determine...either the bullet hole covers/removes the dot or it doesn't...I don't have to use a scoring reticle...but when measuring a best edge score on a target it gets darned hard to put that reticle over the exact center of the bullet hole, due to the way some targets tear and some bullets don't leave a nice round black ring on the paper....
One thing that is a little strange using the Creedmore rule...is that I and many others don't shoot the record bulls in their numerical order...so to score them in that order doesn't tell you who shot the first 10-X score...In my opinion it is like saying let's pull target #5 and start with it...I know that there is no easy way to apply the Creedmore rule other that a known numerical sequence...but as I stated...in my opinion the wipeout is easier to determine and I DON'T use a reticle it is either gone or completely covered by the bullet mark..
Eddie in Texas
The order in which the bulls are shot make no difference in the Creedmore. The score for the match (match 1, match 2, etc.) is what determines the winner or the place holder. One would not even have to look at the targets and bulls until such time as competitors are tied EXACTLY the same, i.e., they dropped an X or point on the same exact target and were tied on ALL other targets. Then you would have to back to the target where the X or point was dropped and go to bull 1. But the occurrence or need for that is VERY rare.