Dick Grosbier
Club Coordinator
Test weights will cost WAY more than the scale.
Yes they do and they are required.
Having high resolution does not necessarily equate to having high level of accuracy.
Test weights will cost WAY more than the scale.
For Matches the NBRSA regional directors (at least in the Eastern) have a set of traveling weights, one weighs 10.5 pounds the other 3 pounds. These weights are certified test wieghts, but are not use to calibrate the scale, they are used to verify the scale. Only the 10 Kg can be used when calibrating, which hasn't been needed in the five or six years that dad has had his. I have only had mine, just over a year. It is also right on. The certified calibration weight was about 70 bucks plus shipping.
What I've been trying to say is, new scales are very accurate. Anyone who's got a test weight can attest that they are WAY within any reasonable limits we as shooters might impose. If a range has an old expensive scale, that one would be suspect.Dick Grosbier said:Having high resolution does not necessarily equate to having high level of accuracy.
Paul, How many times have you seen your scale to be wrong (more than the .01# it specifies?)PBike said:The scales require a test weight to be calibrated, if needed. The scales are precalibrated and certified. Each scale has a set amount that the scale needs to be calibrated at when needed. Ours require a 10Kg test weight. Dad has a Ultra 30 Myweigh, I have the Ultra 55 Myweigh, both require 10Kg. Dad bought the certified test weight from a scale certification company with all the paperwork to validate the weight. What this does is to allow us to test that the scale actually reads exactly 10Kg with the weight on it.
Francis,FBecigneul said:Don't bet your Christmas money on that one. A Hall Of Fame shooter was found to have gone overweight by changing his scope at a match. He was DQd.
.......... I seriously doubt you'll ever have a person who would bring a gun right at the limit, shoot well enough to worry about it. Those types don't generally do so well.
QUOTE]
interesting backpocket analysis.
opinions vary
al
Scott Hobarth was found to have a heavy rifle before a match at Holton. He hacksawed some off his butt stock in the loading barn, shot the match, and never competed again. True story.
It seems some people just "snap" when faced with BR bureaucracy. I would have taken a voluntary DNQ before I "butched" my stock with a freehand hack saw cut. Perhaps the thought of burnishing off an ounce or two against the back of a running automotive fan belt never occured to Mr. Hobarth ( what's that smell ? ).
Seriously though, I have seen noteable "Hall of Fame" shooters get weighed with a heavy rifle and flip out with the "this can't possibly be" routine 'cause they just weighed it at another range and it was fine ? Strangely enough,every one else made weight.
Speaking of strange,my first Custom BR rifle( put together by a noteable gunsmith) hit the scales at the '02 Nationals at Palmisano's at a mere 9lbs 10 ozs. I have never been stared at by so many people at once in my entire life. Later, I questioned my soon to be "ex-gunsmith" and I was told that "it was better to have a balanced rifle than a rifle that weighed exactly 10-1/2 lbs". True story.
Joel
I'm not sure how you arrived at that conclusion from what was said, but, I suppose I'll take your word for it. I don't think he said the weight was missing in order to be balanced, only that the gun without that weight was balanced. But you knew that.So then, it must be extremely difficult to make a 10-1/2 lb gun that is balanced ? So then, a reduction of 14 oz to achieve this "balance" is strategic and not just poor balance planning? Why not an 8lb balanced rifle---------get real !
Nader,
I only ever built one gun for short range br. An LV. I make my own stocks from blanks, and since that one was laminated, it was pretty dense and needed to be whittled out a bit to make weight. When I was done, the rifle weighed in around 11.40 or so, and I knew the wood had not dried yet so it would loose quite a bit over the next few days. Iirc, it finished up around 11.3x (x = mid to low). Afiac, that is about ideal. Could the rifle have weighed less and shot the same? I'd say yes. Why did I stop? cause there was no need to do more work. Why didn't I stop at 11.50. Because I do not want to show up at a match and spend my time wondering if my rifle is legal.
Balance... IMO (with stress on imo). Balance is more about shape than it is about weight placement. Since I make my own stocks, actions, and do my own barrel work, I have a little more latitude with where the weight goes than the typical shooter. I have seen a ___ of a lot more difference in how a gun shoots by changing the shape of the stock than I ever did by altering it for weight. For that matter, I thougth about this next statement since I posted yesterday, and I can say that in my competitive shooting years, I have NEVER seen a rifle have weight added after the fact, by the owner (smith, whatever) and shoot better with than without.
Now for a return question, have you ever seen an LV that was equally competitive with HV rifles? An additional 17% more weight often shows up as nothing in the agg size doesn't it? Even still, yes, they do shoot a "little" better, but, they certainly don't shoot 17% better do they?
Now for a return question, have you ever seen an LV that was equally competitive with HV rifles? An additional 17% more weight often shows up as nothing in the agg size doesn't it? Even still, yes, they do shoot a "little" better, but, they certainly don't shoot 17% better do they?
Boyd,Since all the other components are pretty much of a fixed weight (speaking 10.5#) except the barrel, Just how light do you think that a 6PPC barrel can be, before it starts giving away accuracy?
Since all the other components are pretty much of a fixed weight (speaking 10.5#) except the barrel, Just how light do you think that a 6PPC barrel can be, before it starts giving away accuracy?