Steve,Steve Swartz wrote:From a practical standpoint, if you don't open the breech the range officilas assume you have not discharged your shot (more often than not).
Therefore, if you keep your breech closed to do some dry fire/holding/pointing/fooling around, you are, in the eyes of the match director, "holding up the match."
I mean, think about it- you have 8 people who shoot finals. When all observers note that their charges have fired their shot, they signal that their part of the line is done. If you keep your action closed, they will assume you are still waiting to shoot.
Well yes; of course you have the right to take the full 75 seconds . . . but I believe it would be considered a great rudeness to do so just because you need extra practice!
Do you *really* want to be irritating the match officials?
Take care of your business and get the heck out of the way. Be a Good Citizen.
Steve Swartz
I have been in and around Finals since their re-introduction (first tried many decades ago at a competition in Rome?) as a CRO, Assistant RO, Jury member, etc.
For an experienced RO on paper targets, knowing when all the shooters have finished has not been a problem - on EST it is a cinch.
At our (AUS) state and national championships, when on paper targets we have little problem in finding 8 experienced shooters to sit behind the Finalists - they get a close-up view of the procedings.
When all 8 observers have dropped their flags, the RO knows all the Finalists have finished.
On EST, when all the overhead scoreboards have registered a shot, the RO knows all the Finalists have finished.
In practice, there does not seem to be a problem.
Spencer