Thanks to Gene for pioneering the idea.
Al
Back in the early to mid 2000's, we started having discussions on this very Web Site about why Tuners were not being used in Centerfire Benchrest.
The consensus was 1. They violated the barrel profile rule. 2. They were not needed because you had other options, i.e., powder charge, seating depth, neck tension, etc. 3. Added too much weight.
I started playing with one of my own design at the old Lake Houston Gun Club, and decided to approach Scott Hunter, the Gulf Coast Region Director, about placing an agenda item in our annual meeting to make Tuners legal for NBRSA Registered Competition.
There was a LOT of opposition. It was tantamount to Benchrest Heresy.
In the mean time, the IBS did approve a design, a real asinine one that said a Tuner had to still meet the barrel profile rules. I believe the idea was if they made it so restrictive and convoluted, nobody would bother. Not many did.
The NBRSA Gulf Coast Region passed my agenda item on Tuners and Scott did propose it to the NBRSA, and at the National meeting at Raton I gave a presentation as to what our thoughts were.
First, the Tuner would NOT have to be subject to the barrel taper rule. Second, it would be included in the weight of the Rifle. Third, the NBRSA would write up a rule governing the rules of adjustment. Many shooters did not want any adjustments at the line. The NBRSA came up with the rule pretty much as it is written now.
The NBRSA Board voted to have a trial year, and see how it went. In the mean time, I worked on my snubber Tuner and finalized that design. It caught the eye of a very famous shooter, and he then designed one of his own, which has become quite popular.
At the time, most shooters were stuck on the two piece design, because that is what Rim Fire used. I based my ideas on a one piece design that attached firmly to the barrel, with a generous surface contact, that was light enough to not cause weight problems.
At the Nationals in Kansas City that next year, the general membership voted to adopt the Tuner rule pretty much as we presented it. The vote was NOT unanimous.
Since then, many designs have come into being, and as was said, many shooters who campaigned against the whole thing are now using Tuners. Most shooter now wonder what all of the hullabaloo was about in the first place.
That is just a brief history as to how Tuners came to be adopted for NBRSA Registered Match Competition. If you have about 5 hours to kill, do a search back in the archives of this Web Site and read some of the knock down, drag out discussions were had over the whole thing with some pretty heated discussions over why we wanted to change things from the way they had always been done.
But I stuck to my Guns, (pun intended)