@djarecke Curious on your thoughts on this, as someone who plays the game at the highest level. Do you think it's something that should be regulated? Gun weight, bag weight, trigger pull weight? Or does it get sorted out naturally by shooters who make the choice to move towards a practical rifle and keep on winning?
It's something I think about. I took 2nd place behind
@CaylenW at a club match earlier this year. He was running a mid-weight 6.5 creedmoor and I was shooting my heavy 6mm. A clean win on his part with no games needed.
I think you made the exact point I was trying to make. Let me explain.
I hadn't shot my .308 or 6.5 in a while, and decided to pull them out (largely so I don't burn up my small rifle primers). I was amazed at:
1. How many hits on target I had with my suppressed .308 out to 800 yards. Even on small targets. However, once the wind got switchy, it was a gamble past 800. The biggest surprise? I was watching trace and spotting impacts from 400 - 800 yards. According to recent trends, this should be impossible. I guess on some level I had thought it was impossible because of all of the "anti-.308" trends of late.
2. How little my "light" 6.5 gave up in terms of control and spotting impacts. Again - the 6.5 was amazingly-accurate and I was spotting trace and impacts nearly as well as with my heavy 6BR. The 6.5 did have a Maverick on it, but still...
None of this should be shocking, but I hadn't shot those rifles in earnest in several years and was amazed at how well they did, and what an extremely minor advantage the 6BR is.
What we have done is create a game, and people are shooting within the rules (or lack thereof), and they have created a subculture that follows the trends of the game. Light triggers, heavy rifles, low recoil, big sandbags, straight taper barrels, use of tripods on stages...
People don't
want to work on fundamentals. They want to do the "Western Culture Thing" and buy a piece of gear, slap a 6 ounce trigger and hit targets. This thought process is not unique to PRS. It's pervasive in our culture.
The impression is that you
NEED those things to do well at a match, and this is simply not true. You
do need those things if you don't have good fundamentals and cannot use your fundamentals under timed pressure. The top guys don't
need those things to shoot well, but they use them as "insurance" or "assurance" to raise their hit probability. Chris Kutalek won a match this year with a pencil-barreled 6.5 shooting MOA against the very best, so gear had nothing to do with his win. Another example is the AG Cup where shooters used tripods on 80% of all of the stages, even the PRS barricade. I hadn't seen that in years.
Personally, I don't like using those things and don't feel they are needed. It almost takes some of the fun out of the stage to have the rifle on a tripod or tac table and I feel like a "driver", not a shooter.
So should we mandate a rifle weight and a trigger pull weight? Eliminate the use of tac tables and tripods?
In my opinion, yes.
But nobody asked me LOL...