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1 Attachment(s)
Originally Posted by Oldtimr
(Post 4415123)
Great, let us know what it measures.
BTW, here's the mount from a nine point I got on my property during the 2021 PA archery season. It doesn't score as high as last year's eight point but at the time I assumed it would be my best ever. |
Nothing wrong with that deer, nice and wide and good mass.
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Might surprise yourself this fall, who knows!
- Jake |
Originally Posted by Bocajnala
(Post 4415215)
Might surprise yourself this fall, who knows!
- Jake |
Just got back from Huntingdon. The official net score was 125 1/8 which is a whopping 1/4" less than my own unofficial net score which shocked the heck out of me considering that was the first deer I have ever tried to score. One of my buddies went along and took a rack from a buck his younger brother got in 2013. It was a ten point and netted around 127. Very nice buck as well.
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Congrats your guess was pretty good.!
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I should get my buck scored I have no idea what it would go. Congrats on cracking 125!
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Originally Posted by Oldtimr
(Post 4415333)
Congrats your guess was pretty good.!
The flexible tape I used was really too wide to get accurate circumferential measurements and that is where we had most of the differences between his and my numbers. I took a print-out of the chart with my scores and it was fun to compare numbers. I was within an eight of an inch on almost every measurement and quite a few were right on. I did have one brain fart where one of my measurements was like 3/4" too long but it evened out in the end because the rack was actually more symmetrical than I had it so that meant there was less of a difference from side-to-side and therefore a smaller deduction from the overall (gross) score. The B&C method places a lot of emphasis on the symmetry of typical racks. Mine had only 2-3/8" of side-to-side deductions. Here's a link to the B&C typical whitetail scoring chart: https://www.boone-crockett.org/score...whitetail_deer |
Originally Posted by blksn8k
(Post 4415404)
It wasn't really a guess. If you go to the Boone & Crockett website they have a spreadsheet that you simply enter the measurements into and it does all the math for you. When I did my own score back in December I used a simple seamstress flexible tape and got pretty close. The official scorer used a combination of a small diameter flexible cable, a folding ruler and a 1/4" wide steel tape. He also used masking tape whenever he needed to hold the cable in place as he went around curves or if he needed to mark reference lines. He used the cable to get the length dimensions and then transferred those onto the wooden folding ruler. The 1/4" steel tape was used only for circumferential measurements.
The flexible tape I used was really too wide to get accurate circumferential measurements and that is where we had most of the differences between his and my numbers. I took a print-out of the chart with my scores and it was fun to compare numbers. I was within an eight of an inch on almost every measurement and quite a few were right on. I did have one brain fart where one of my measurements was like 3/4" too long but it evened out in the end because the rack was actually more symmetrical than I had it so that meant there was less of a difference from side-to-side and therefore a smaller deduction from the overall (gross) score. The B&C method places a lot of emphasis on the symmetry of typical racks. Mine had only 2-3/8" of side-to-side deductions. Here's a link to the B&C typical whitetail scoring chart: https://www.boone-crockett.org/score...whitetail_deer |
Originally Posted by Oldtimr
(Post 4415405)
I actually know how it is done. I was an official mearurer for The PGC records book for 13 years.
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