David Levene wrote:Chia wrote:It says that you cannot use a system that actively reduces the movements. From my understanding of this thread, Kicker's idea does exactly this.
It actively reduces the movements in much the same way as a properly adjusted trigger, a correct trigger technique or even core muscle fitness reduces fitness. I presume that you want to ban all of them.
You might like to read
this thread.
Thanks for the link. I hope that my legal argument was helpful for Kicker, because that's the spirit it was intended to be. I'm not trying to poo poo what he's doing, in fact it's intriguing enough to give serious consideration. What I did to it is what any bored lawyer with 5 minutes could do. I'm not particularly experienced or knowledgeable in the field. Any lawyer for the investor who looks these over will be both. And they
will go over the design with a fine tooth comb. Better to play devil's advocate now then lose in those talks later when you've already put serious money down.
TenMetrePeter wrote:@chia.
What is the difference between an innovation that gives an advantage but still passes a now inadequate test devised before the innovation was devised, and a cheat??
I say its a cheat. Ban it before it takes hold.
Find a loophole in the law and win a case for a client by all means but finding loopholes in sport usually constitutes cheating.
You would be amazed at how similar the two can get. I respect that your point of view has some force behind it, but I'm saying that discouraging people who can poke holes in the system like this is counterproductive. He is sharing the idea because he wants(wanted?) our opinion. If he really wanted to cheat, he wouldn't share it with anyone, especially not a forum full of people who are generally pretty good shooters who could compete with him. Bringing it forward as a design idea lets the concept be explored in a safe environment. It's much better to have an idea considered and rejected intelligently than stupidly carried out.
Personally, I would never use one of those triggers. The concept seems to take away from what the sport is about at it's core: rock solid shooting. If the person has to do weird things like squeezing the trigger really hard before releasing and then lightly brushing it again, that seems removed from the essence of the sport. I want to learn to shoot, not operate a trigger mechanism.