slofyr wrote:conradin wrote:...I am not good at FP much, but I love it because I can genuinely know how I compare with everyone since 1900....
To accurately compare your scores to the old guys, you would need to shoot the pistols they used. Refinements evolve to make it easier.
I did.
I have handled a Sauveur, a Swiss commissioned pistol (1900 Olympics, WC 1900-1902), a S&W perfected model, a S&W Russian (1896 Olympics), a Stecherspanner, a Tell, a Hammerli 100 series, a Hammerli 150/60 series, A Morini CM84E, a Toz 35, even the 1939 WC Zentrum, which is similar to the MTs pistols. There were maybe a total of 2 or 3 models of Olympic or world championship free pistols that I have never personally handled or fired before, and only the MTs55 I would consider a significant regret that I have never handled or fired before.
The modern free pistol evolution started with the 1908 Büchel Stecherspanner, then 1909 Buchel Tell, then Hugo Doll copied it and made it into the MP33, Hämmerli bought him out after the WWII, then Hämmerli had a new ownership and renamed it 100, thus the 100 series. During the 1970s they moved the foreend away from the barrel and hence the 150 series. Electronic trigger replaced the set trigger. Wang Yifu was fed up of losing, so he became a Morini client and won the 94 championship first time out.
Mr. Efim Haydurov copied the Hämmerli and made the Isch 1, then mass produced it into the Toz 35.
A Toz 35 just won the last WC in the Rio Warm up. It is the same thing that Richard Fisher won with the 1908 World Championship with, except Fischer's grip does not have an all enveloping grip, so it was even harder for Fisher, but Fisher has an entire afternoon to shoot, so he has a time advantage. I have handled a Stecherspanner before, and if anything, it was harder because of the tiny sight. Other than that, everything is the same.
If you like to shoot a free pistol WITHOUT a hair trigger or set your trigger weight heavier, you can compare yourself with the 1905 world champion Julien Van Asbroeck, or the 1908 (Paul Van Ashbroeck), 1912 (Lane) and 1920 (Fredereick) Olympic champion. Just to be fair, Paul BEAT the hair trigger pistols (the entire German team) in 1909-1910. I have handled all their free pistols models before.
If you use a CFP (.32 or smaller for example) to shoot free pistol for fun, you can compare yourself from 1900-1904, and 1906. Remember, you STILL have to shoot it shot by shot, just like them. Target is the same, scoring is the same, distance is the same. Just slightly more time. If you think it is unfair because they get 8 to 16 hours to finish 60 shots, that was only because that 16 hours was for the ENTIRE team. 16 hours means "The range is open for two days, you can use it anytime". Stäheli could show up with his Swiss Luger .30 and spent 1 hour finishing up his match in 1906, then his teammates would take over one by one, and all five of them probably all packed up by lunch time. In 1912, the total time allow for individual was one hour IIRC. Team USA shot side by side instead of one after another. I still have the photo.