No, NOT IDPA scoring. Rob uses a similar scoring method , but he calls it Enos Factor Scoring (named for Brian Enos). This particular drill adds .10 second for each point dropped. The smaller the EF, the more speed-heavy the drill. The larger the EF (.50 for example), the more point-heavy or accuracy-related the drill.
keep the blooper coming.
jordonhurd 2 years ago
Being first on the bloopers is the best!!! especialy with a mac n cheese grip!!
=)
TheScottShepherd 2 years ago
Hi,
The bloopers are great, they make ya smile.
John Koppi
ponyexpressammo 2 years ago
Those bloopers really work on the Deja-Vu muscles...
foulsmellingpig 2 years ago
I assume this wasn't IDPA scoring. 4.43 plus 2 down would equal 5.43. Please enlighten me.
hankfan79 2 years ago
No, NOT IDPA scoring. Rob uses a similar scoring method , but he calls it Enos Factor Scoring (named for Brian Enos). This particular drill adds .10 second for each point dropped. The smaller the EF, the more speed-heavy the drill. The larger the EF (.50 for example), the more point-heavy or accuracy-related the drill.
robleatham 2 years ago
Yes, more bloopers.
2robb2 2 years ago