Thanks. If I start shooting USPSA, I'll just let the scorekeepers take care of it. I'll be able to see my placement and if I shoot the same COF any improvements.I'm not sure what your scores are.
The raw score is 13. With a Miss, that's a 10 point penalty. What practiscore doesn't show is score after penalties. Your hit factor would be 3 points divided time.
The scoring gets a little confusing (if you let it) after "hit factor"
The highest hit factor gets all the stage points. Each person gets stage points based on the percentage they shoot compared to the stage winner.
If you are exactly 90% of stage winner, you get 27 stage points for that stage (overly simplified as it calculates to the nearest ten thousandths)
Steel challenge is basically hit 5 pieces of steel as fast as you can. Most people are shooting 22 in that right now but there are some center fire divisions. It's probably more fun with a 22 vs centerlineThanks. If I start shooting USPSA, I'll just let the scorekeepers take care of it. I'll be able to see my placement and if I shoot the same COF any improvements.
It will be some time before I can start to play the "game" and figure out the better ways to play it. I figure in the end, you have to be both fast and accurate.
So, should I try steel challenge next weekend? Or USPSA? Both?
That being said. Steel challenge is the easiest thing to learn. I don't want to bash it, I do shoot both but ive only been shooting .22LR this year.Steel challenge is basically hit 5 pieces of steel as fast as you can. Most people are shooting 22 in that right now but there are some center fire divisions. It's probably more fun with a 22 vs centerline
What you shot today on stage 5 was a very small and easy version of a uspsa course of fire.
Steel challenge stages are standardized and geared towards shooting fast. (Most people dry fire these stages with stickers put on a wall)
Thanks DougNice match, thanks for setting it up. Ran smooth