It's a real difficult one to call.
What I think should NOT happen is a blanket NPPL style ban on markers "capable" of trigger bounce, or at least markers they they decide are "capable". For instance there is a blanket ban on RT/X Valved Automag's with mechanical triggers. The reactive trigger feature kicks back on your finger, and with simple tuning can be set up so that the return force is so strong you just keep your finger steady and the trigger bounces off it- basically "runaway". That's obviously not right, and clearly dangerous. However a correctly tuned 'Mag with a reactive trigger will not do this. However the NPPL have banned RTs. outright That's a shame for the 'Mag owners who have made the decision to stick with mechanical triggerse for reasons of simplicity and reliability: as long as the marker isn't tuned to "runaway", it still won't fire as fast as an electro "walking" the trigger, so why is the RT unsafe?
And technically, any marker with an electro trigger can be set up to bounce, so why only ban RTs?
The solution must be for chrono judges to fire the markers and judge the bounce at chrony time. If it's deemed excessive, then you're not allowed to use it. My idea would be to first pull the trigger firmly all the way back, and check only one shot is fired. Then a slow gentle pull of the trigger to check if there's excessive reactivity, then a gentle slow pull to check if there's a sweetspot where the marker will bounce excessively...... note the word "excessively"..... most triggers have a sweetspot so the organisers would have to decide what is excessive and make sure that the rulings are consistent.
What I think should NOT happen is a blanket NPPL style ban on markers "capable" of trigger bounce, or at least markers they they decide are "capable". For instance there is a blanket ban on RT/X Valved Automag's with mechanical triggers. The reactive trigger feature kicks back on your finger, and with simple tuning can be set up so that the return force is so strong you just keep your finger steady and the trigger bounces off it- basically "runaway". That's obviously not right, and clearly dangerous. However a correctly tuned 'Mag with a reactive trigger will not do this. However the NPPL have banned RTs. outright That's a shame for the 'Mag owners who have made the decision to stick with mechanical triggerse for reasons of simplicity and reliability: as long as the marker isn't tuned to "runaway", it still won't fire as fast as an electro "walking" the trigger, so why is the RT unsafe?
And technically, any marker with an electro trigger can be set up to bounce, so why only ban RTs?
The solution must be for chrono judges to fire the markers and judge the bounce at chrony time. If it's deemed excessive, then you're not allowed to use it. My idea would be to first pull the trigger firmly all the way back, and check only one shot is fired. Then a slow gentle pull of the trigger to check if there's excessive reactivity, then a gentle slow pull to check if there's a sweetspot where the marker will bounce excessively...... note the word "excessively"..... most triggers have a sweetspot so the organisers would have to decide what is excessive and make sure that the rulings are consistent.