I've been out of the comp scene for a while. Are no dial stages still prevalent? I'm debating on reticles for a new scope.
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These stages are rare, and a lot of folks are moving away from the clutter of a Christmas tree reticle. Something like the MIL-C or the JTAC reticle are good examples.
I don’t hold over unless threatened with physical violence. And even then I’ll probably still dial, but everyone is different.Not sure the "lot of folks" are who are moving away from tree reticles for clutter as most today are not cluttered at all but that's their decision. I wouldn't recommend a non tree to anyone wanting to get into match shooting now.
I don’t hold over unless threatened with physical violence. And even then I’ll probably still dial, but everyone is different.
I think this has a lot to do with the stage times being more generous. There used to be more stages that MD's new 95+% of the people were going to time out. Now the pendulum has swung the other way in a 2 day match - 95% of shooters are going to finish every stage before the buzzer.Matty B (one of the better PRS shooters to date) uses an H2CMR. Mr. Jarecke above has won several two day events and almost never holds over. Most of the top PRS shooters are now dialing for wind and moving away from tree reticles.
While many thinks the reticle is too thin, the big takeaway on JTAC reticle was it was designed by guys at the top currently and they purposely left out the tree.
Personal preference of course. But the trend at the top is moving more and more away from holds or trees. Just the way it's going.
Matty B (one of the better PRS shooters to date) uses an H2CMR. Mr. Jarecke above has won several two day events and almost never holds over. Most of the top PRS shooters are now dialing for wind and moving away from tree reticles.
While many thinks the reticle is too thin, the big takeaway on JTAC reticle was it was designed by guys at the top currently and they purposely left out the tree.
Personal preference of course. But the trend at the top is moving more and more away from holds or trees. Just the way it's going.
I'm kind of glad, dedicated hold over stages have kind of fallen by the way side. Present the shooters with a problem and allow them to solve it in the manner they best see fit. If that is holding over, cool. If that is dialing, cool.
I disagree and it's fine if you disagree with me, we've agreed on plenty of other points on here.That's a good stage but requiring them to use it is also. Not lazy. It's forcing some out of their comfort zone and possibly showing them a missing spot in their training. Just like stages that make you shoot weakside. It's challenging the shooter and telling them how to shoot the stage. They already do it with the stage description. Adding they must use holds or weakside is not lazy but adding another element.
I disagree and it's fine if you disagree with me, we've agreed on plenty of other points on here.
Requiring it in the description is lazy on both accounts. If you want a shooter to use a skill, set the stage design up so that the most points can be scored by using the desired skill. Weak side is a perfect example. Again our local MDs have a stage that requires it, through design by using a roof top. Shooter must shoot X rounds from the lefts side of the roof, both feet on the ground, then the shooter will transition to the right side of the roof top and fire X rounds with both feet on the ground. It is near impossible for me as a righty to keep both feet on the ground and fire strong side.
@Mormegil87 I'll probably be there with you in May.As far as stage times getting more generous as @superde mentioned I think it depends on the place, K&M is still known for 90s, many PRS matches are going to 105s which is a good middle ground.
Agreed. I haven't been there since 2018 or 2019.@Mormegil87 I'll probably be there with you in May.
Even though K&M has 90 second par times, on my 5 trips to the Kahles match I've only held more than .5 on any target a few times. So holding on target for most of your shots negates the time to a certain extent.
I shot for S&B when the H2CMR came out and used it and it was a good reticle at the time. I would never go back to it. Why would I use a reticle that limits use. You can do the same thing with a tree reticle and more.
And saying oh this guy uses it and he does good so you should do it too is not a good argument. It just shows he practices and is a good shooter.
I never said anyone should use anything. You decided to imply that for some reason. I gave examples. It's up to the individual to decide.
If you polled 1k shooters how often they don't dial, the holdover crowd would be an overwhelming minority.
The flip side to the "does that and more" is that you have all this reticle taking up FOV for something you use a few times a year. Some people don't notice the tree and it's like it's not there until they need it. Others see it and they don't like it.
There's no "right" answer.
The skill stage for the peterson match last year was the no dial 3 distance oneIn local matches sure. In large 2-day matches, I haven't seen one between the west and east coast matches I attended.
FixedReally? It's good another skill set that's falling by the wayside? You can see in this thread people are afraid to do holdovers. Why? Because they never do it or learn how to do it or never challenged to do it.
Hell just go to benchrest fine duplex reticle then as that's all you need if never holding. Weak 6mms, 30 pound rifles, limited movement etc. Make the full barricade benchresttransformationtransition. LOL
Yes. Occasionally you’ll see no-dial stages, but even if you do, they trip up plenty of people because they are speed stages without dialing (duh, right?). There’s almost always a trade off with precision and speed, and depending on the size of targets, you’re “stacking errors” against yourself on small targets if you hold over. In addition to this, it’s easy to mess up a hold (“I held 2.3 instead of 3.3! Aargh!”)
And it’s a lot faster especially when you dial the mid range and hold over and under on the far and near targets. MDs can make it a good idea, but maybe change ruffles comfortable feathers.You should try it and practice it. You will see the advantages when needed. The numbers on the reticle do the same as the numbers on the dial.
I think most guys would be shocked how easy it is to hit a 2 MOA target with a good reticle inside 800 yds. If you're struggling to make hits with your reticle, I bet the reticle you're using isn't so great for it, or you just need practice. It's seriously not hard. Most guys I shoot with are terrified of dialing wind, because they might do it wrong. Once you incorporate something into your regular routine, it's a complete non-issue. I dial wind all the time now. People are afraid of stuff they haven't practiced.And that is where practice comes in to not have those mistakes. Also most good reticles now have .2 mil marks so not like years back with no marks between mils or even .5 marks. With .2 marks you can be as accurate as dialing if you practice it.
And I got 100 percent with mpct3The skill stage for the peterson match last year was the no dial 3 distance one
I was ROing (spotting) a stage at the Best of Texas 2day match a few years ago. The target was beyond a body of water And you could clearly see the wind direction in the ripples on the pond. One shooter, after droppping most (all?) of the points in the stage asked where he was missing.I think most guys would be shocked how easy it is to hit a 2 MOA target with a good reticle inside 800 yds. If you're struggling to make hits with your reticle, I bet the reticle you're using isn't so great for it, or you just need practice. It's seriously not hard. Most guys I shoot with are terrified of dialing wind, because they might do it wrong. Once you incorporate something into your regular routine, it's a complete non-issue. I dial wind all the time now. People are afraid of stuff they haven't practiced.
Go practice, lol.
Spotting impacts to adjust is huge if the terrain allows. Tending towards higher magnification, even if you have to use a supplemental red dot to get on target might help in that situation.I was ROing (spotting) a stage at the Best of Texas 2day match a few years ago. The target was beyond a body of water And you could clearly see the wind direction in the ripples on the pond. One shooter, after droppping most (all?) of the points in the stage asked where he was missing.
“Hey, where were those shots falling?”
“Off the left side of the target.”
“Really, I dialed [something] for wind.”
“Well, the wind is moving right to left…”
“What? … … … Of fuck! I dialed the wrong way!”
Matty B (one of the better PRS shooters to date) uses an H2CMR. Mr. Jarecke above has won several two day events and almost never holds over. Most of the top PRS shooters are now dialing for wind and moving away from tree reticles.
While many thinks the reticle is too thin, the big takeaway on JTAC reticle was it was designed by guys at the top currently and they purposely left out the tree.
Personal preference of course. But the trend at the top is moving more and more away from holds or trees. Just the way it's going.
So if a match director makes a stage that it would be impossible to clean if you dial or designs it so you couldn't shoot it unless you shoot weakside he is smart and challenging but if he makes you hold for the stage or requires weakside he is lazy? Come on man in my best Biden voice. LOL
I remember when anyone here who said that dialing for wind was a valid strategy in some instances was immediately shouted down by the PRS crowd.
Now that evidently the pendulum has swung the other way, the crowd is sure to follow
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Not at all. Not dialing is only part of the stage. Not all of it. He still has to put together a stage and then to add a difficulty and skill test says hold only. I can see why most are crying about them seeing the responses here. Easier to say the MD is lazy than look at yourself as lazy for not practicing a useful skill right?I think you're being argumentative for the sake of it, and I should know......
Yes, he is lazy. It takes much less time to write "this stage is no dial" (or whatever skill you want to force) on the stage description than to design a stage that rewards that same skill purely through stage design.