jtischauser
I'm addicted to kicking ass
Is the use of the warning MUZZLE allowed in USPSA for instances when the shooter is close to the 180 or sweeping themselves?
So saying muzzle or watch the firey death end dipshit it ok?Mitch Gibson said:ROs are free to offer a warning.
8.6.1 No assistance of any kind can be given to a competitor during a course
of fire, except that any Range Officer assigned to a stage may issue
safety warnings to a competitor at any time. Such warnings will not be
grounds for the competitor to be awarded a reshoot.
I'll say thing like that if it's somebody I shoot with a lot and I know they know what to do, but with new shooters I try to keep it more professional.Burk Cornelius said:i.e "clear, holster, blah blah blah" That is a direct quote
Yeah. I always warn if possible.Jesse Tischauser said:So saying muzzle or watch the firey death end dipshit it ok?
it obviously didn't takeBurk Cornelius said:The first warning I received as a competitor was "don't be a dumb ass"
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Mitch Gibson said:These are the only range commands that exist:
Make Ready
Are you ready?
Standby
Beep (start signal)
Stop! (If you need to stop a competitor)
If you are finished, unload and show clear
If clear, hammer down, holster
Range is clear
EDIT: DON'T DO THAT AGAIN
Feegee, I'm reading old posts to catch up. I'm getting back into shooting and taking an RO class, but having scored several, I didn't know that (I've never kept score behind you as RO). Thanks for posting.Feegee Matlock said:I will give one warning for everything but 180/sweep yourself.
I am a laid back RO. I Try to keep my eye on the gun at all times, and assume the score keeper is looking for any foot falts, etc.
Anyone that grabs the scoring tablet should know that, but if they look new we need to explain it to them.