James A. Kelbly
New member
Having shot the last two Nationals, I was looking at how many NEW Sporters were on the line. NOT ONE, same ole LV rifles being shot in Sporter. I heard of ONE person making a experimental Sporter now that rules allow it, ONE. But let me ask, what really can you do or why would you change when the weight stayed same as LV and 10.5 lbs. The Sporter needs to be changed on the weight, so that more people will experiment. Yes I know Gene Bukys was a big influence in getting Sporter changed, but he sure isn't changing with the way he has been shooting, same with Costa and other top shooters. Look at the aggs from Phoenix, why would anyone change unless there could be a advantage in building new rifle that could agg smaller. Yes it was a big deal when the change to Sporter was announced, but NO ONE has changed.
I feel that the Sporter class should be changed to a heavier weight, this would allow more experimentation. 15 lb or 17 lbs or whatever that would give a guy a chance to try new ideas and not build same ole thing. Plus if you did a weight change to say 17 lbs, we might pick up a few F class shooters from FTR class that is 17 lbs, especially since they now shoot 300 yards as one of their distances. It might bring in more shooters, something that is definetly needed in short range BR shooting.
Has anyone out there tried to build a experimental Sporter, if so how did it go, if not, why not?
Jim
I feel that the Sporter class should be changed to a heavier weight, this would allow more experimentation. 15 lb or 17 lbs or whatever that would give a guy a chance to try new ideas and not build same ole thing. Plus if you did a weight change to say 17 lbs, we might pick up a few F class shooters from FTR class that is 17 lbs, especially since they now shoot 300 yards as one of their distances. It might bring in more shooters, something that is definetly needed in short range BR shooting.
Has anyone out there tried to build a experimental Sporter, if so how did it go, if not, why not?
Jim