No
And while we are on the subject, lets clarify another item. The rule book says that a shooter can challenge any target measurement by putting forth a $5 fee, getting a Ref, and having that Ref take the target to the stat house for a re-measure. If the target comes back .009 or more to the shooters favor, he gets his $5 back.
I am sick and tired of shooters saying that in is "poor sportsmanship" to challenge a targets measurement. That is a bunch of crap. IT'S IN THE RULES.
I got a first hand dose of this at The Crawfish, when I decided to shoot my 30BR in the HV 100. I had to protest 4 measurements, because the official was simply not measuring the targets correctly. A good example. Match One was scored as a .202. I could look and see it was smaller, (when a 30 caliber group is completely inside the moth ball with black all around), and after I put up $5, in came back a .152. That is a BIG difference.
I have also, on occasion, had targets that were measured too small, and I will get a Ref and tell him. Heck, if you have a .320 hanging up there, and the scorer wrote .220 on the target, everybody else can see it, so you might just as well get it corrected. Trust me, behind your back they will be saying, "man, ole such and such sure got a break on that one". There is nothing in the Rules that say anything about this, but we are a close knit group. Doing the Honorable Thing is certainly worth more in the eyes of your Peers than a few places higher on the Stat Sheet.
All I want is what I shot, no more, no less. The Rule Book allows a shooter to challenge a measurement. It is a rule no less important than the rule that says a LV or Sporter cannot weigh more than 168 ounces.
I am NOT saying this to slam the official scorers. It is a tough job, and can be very tedious. They are to be commended for sitting there all day long and doing a job that is as bad as picking cotton. They are only human, and can make mistakes. That is why the NBRSA and IBS sees fit to include the measurement challenge rule in the Official Rules of Benchrest.
At our Region Meeting this week end at New Braunfels, I am going to address this to the other Region Members. Perhaps, since more shooters are building 30 caliber Rifles and choosing to shoot them in Group, it is time to place some sort of marking on the target, maybe an orange sticker, so that thy Official Scorer will notice. The same can be said for 22 cal.
Mike Stinnet, who shoots a 30 Cal exclusivly in Group, has been putting up with this for sometime. Trust me, Benchrest is difficult enough without having to worry about getting slighted .055 inch on every target.
If we are going to do it, let's strive to do it right.........jackie