Newsletter May
Transcription
Newsletter May
May, 1st, 2009 Warm weather has finally arrived !!! On page (5) there are details about the raffle at the Kentucky State Shoot. We still have tickets left. Don’t forget about the BBQ Dinner Saturday night for everyone that attends. The dinner is a donation and all proceeds from the dinner go to the Kentucky Youth Program. If anyone is interested in hosting a shooting clinic let me or Dean DeBow know when and where you would like to do this. For details go to: www.ddshooting.com DeVault’s Winners Box Bill McGuire: Blazer F3 ~ DeVault Custom Stock & Add-on Delrin rib. US Gran Prix FITASC & Sporting Championships. Champion - FITASC 191 x 200 Champion - Sporting 186 X 200 Remember to let us know your scores so we can post you in the winners box! The World According to Me ~ “Dennis DeVault” A tribute to my Dad. He stands 5’- 6” tall with a small frame and weathered face that displays narrow eyes. They are wise and have the look of many years of decisions that have not always pleasant but decisions that had to be made. My father has been my best friend for many years. Dad introduced me to trap shooting when I was 11 years old. We did not have a lot of money so I worked a paper route to earn money to shoot a couple of practices each week. Pop ran a gun club for 10 years. Every Friday night I rode to the club with him to set trap, pull and score or work the kitchen. A When all my friends were off to school dances and dating I was at the gun club doing my duties. I don’t feel that I missed out on anything. In fact I am grateful for all the memories of the older shooters and good times that I had growing up. My Dad never went anywhere that I wasn’t riding “shotgun” in the passenger seat next to him. Dad wasn’t the greatest shot but he did manage to break a 100 straight from the 22 yd. Line a week before the Grand American. That week at the Grand he Broke a 97 in the Budweiser Handicap and then broke a 96 in the Grand American Handicap. I remember that there was quite a large amount of celebration for two days around the camp grounds that week. We always stayed in the back of the school next the east end of the grounds. There was a fence with a gate that led over to the school. The back doors of the school were unlocked so all that camped could shower in the gym locker room area. It was a different time and things were just a lot simpler then. In the mid 90’s I bought a trailer and fixed it up a little for displaying guns. Pop, and a good friend we called Babo would take my trailer and head to The Phoenix trap and skeet club for the Spring Grand. It was great: they would pack all the guns and clothes and head out. I would fly out and they would be waiting for me at the airport to take me to the hotel. We would shoot the week there and then head north to Las Vegas for the midWinter tournament that always followed the Spring Grand. I remember the first year we did this was 1996. Dad was the official re- loader and that year he loaded 10,000 rounds for us to shoot for the two weeks. Pop and Babo had a ball and shot a ton of targets. On the second day of the shoot in Vegas Pop informed me that we were out of shells. I had to by 20 more flats to make it through the rest of the week. Pop told me that I shot more than my share but everyone had a great time and we did shoot a lot of shells those two weeks. This method of travel and shooting lasted for 3 years with Pop, Babo and myself going everywhere together. I remember that I bought three reloading machines. The Mec was first the PW was second and the Spolar Gold was the last loader that I bought. I don’t know how many shells Pop loaded on the Mec but when I sold the PW had 143,000 on the counter. I sold the Spolar Gold a couple of years ago and the counter had been reset three times. When it left the shop the counter had 63,000 on the display. I will never forget those times, they have helped to form me into the person I am today. I miss those days and the life that was a little slower. No cell phones, no cable TV, no computers, My Space and NO STRESS. Pop and my Mom will celebrate their 80th Birthdays this year and I am very lucky to still have both of them. Pop is showing signs of slowing down but he still drives into town every Tuesday and spends a couple of hours just setting in my office, observing and sitting quietly watching and thinking I am sure about days gone by. Pop told me this week, when the weather warms up, that he wants to go and shoot a little bit. I told him that it will be my turn to pick him up and chauffer him to the shoot. He just smiled and said that would be great. I know that time is not on our side anymore, and the days are growing short, but I will do all I can to cherish the time we have left. I dedicate this month to the smartest man that I have ever known. Pop does not have a computer, and will not be able to read this, but I want to say, “I love you Dad and thank you for all the sacrifices that you and Mom went through to make me the person that I am today.” Your loving son, Dennis R. DeVault AKA Rodeo Man From the Mind of ~ Dean DeBow The season is on top of us once again Things are going full speed here so this article will be short, and to the point. This month I would like to talk about ammo and or reloads. Ammo plays a crucially important role, be it good or bad, in your scores of course, I know a father and son who are both shooting from mid yardage. They were both shooting well after we had worked together. A couple of weeks later they headed to the Grand to shoot both weeks. When you shoot for 10 days straight, all of the little problems start to show up. The ones you get away with shooting the 2 or 3 day shoots re-surface. The father called me, to complain about being unable to finish with a good score. He would start out good but go in the tank out of the last 35 to 40 targets! I asked if he had changed anything, he replied “No”. The next time we were able to be at the same place together was at the Grand. So off we went to the practice trap. At that point I noticed he and his son were both shooting Handicap loads! I questioned this because they were shooting lighter loads before. After trying some lighter loads he started to realize his shooting was no worse, in fact a bit better. But it took time for his brain to realize that less recoil was not going to hurt. By the end of the Grand both of them were shooting better. In fact his son was in a shoot off in the last handicap. Point being; if you practice with one load and it works, stick with it. Do not go changing because someone else won an event with a particular load. Use what you are use to! Pointing the gun properly and staying in it, lighter loads, means much more than a faster load or more shot! I have seen people use 1 oz. loads in practice and then change to a heavy 1-1/8 in a tournament. Then they wonder why they have trouble finishing the event. They will get sore and the gun will kick more than usual, by the time this is noticed, it is too late. The highest handicap average was set one year, over 98 percent, with extra light loads from the 27 yard line. They were 1125 fps. I am not going to tell you to shoot a certain load or brand of ammo. All I am saying is, in my opinion you are better off shooting the lightest load you are comfortable with mentally. I have broken some very good scores from 27 yards using 23/4-1-1/8 loads, the same thing I shoot in singles and doubles events, I just change shot size. Some very good shooters use 8’s in handicap during the summer months. A have a friend that worked for one of the major ammo company’s. They did some testing, and the results were amazing. From 27 yards shooting a HDCP 1-1/8 load-1250, and a light load1145, using the same amount of shot, the point of impact difference is 5.8” to center of the mass. When you look at it this way it just does not make sense to put yourself through this punishment! Consider that when choosing a 1250 fps load as opposed to a softer 1145 fps load to shoot from 20 to 24 yards, the point of impact difference of the mass is less than 3”. I do not believe you will notice any difference except the way you feel at the end of a day or two, and epically a week or 10 days of shooting! For all of you who reload, here is some valuable information. Please do not get caught up in chronographing your reloads unless you have a factory load to compare it to. The chronographs sold by most distributors through the mail or over the counter are single projectile models are for rifles or pistols. The chronographs used to check shot shells by the factory are called mass chronographs. They measure the speed at the center of the mass of the shot cloud. So if you use one be sure to check it against a factory load that you want to duplicate. If you have access to a cylinder bore choke use it. It will give you a truer reading than a full choke by shorting the shot string. I have seen people shoot for hours, load after load across the chronographs. It is good to see if your loads are consistent, within 40 fps of each other, most factory loads are not! But other than that it is a waste of time. I am expressing my individual opinions in hope that some of you will not have to purchase the mistakes that have already been bought and paid for! I hope all of you have a successful shooting season and reach some or all of your goals. Also I hope to meet some of you who read these articles, especially if it helps! Remember there is a Champion in each and every one of you. Until next month, Dean DeBow Private One-on-One instruction Contact Dean DeBow @ 270-348-2223 If you have a group of 10 shooters we can arrange for a clinic to be held at your local gun club. Check out our web site at www.ddshooting,com for all the details Clinic dates are listed on this page and up-dated as we fill these clinics. Shooting lessons, video work, stock fitting and the mental game to help you become the best that you can be! Reach us on the web or call the number above for Dean and for Dennis DeVault 330-456-6070 Thank you and let us know how we can be of service! DeVault Industries LLC 3500 12th. Street NW Canton, Ohio 44708 330-456-6070 www.devaultind.com E-mail [email protected] I don’t know where this is but Cindy keeps telling me it’s where she wants to be. Cindy said that she could checker even better if I would take her to this spot. Never hurts to dream!!!
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