I was out at the range the other day, shooting the Accelerator stage from Steel Challenge...
If you number the plates from right to left, 1-5, I would normally draw to #5, then shoot 4, 1, 2, and then the stop plate (#3).
My reasoning: I want to draw to a fairly easy target (and that big rectangle, even at 20 yards, isn't that difficult), I want to shoot at the hardest target early in the stage (and I'm shooting it second), and I want to minimize my transitions as much as possible (hence 5, 4, 1, 2, 3).
I always did decently, but not great. That #4 is harder than it looks, and a screwup there tends to add a lot of time. Overall, my Accelerator times were okay for my level, but never really spectacular, and even my best stage time wasn't good compared to the expected peak time. (I have a 13.25, with the peak time being 11.50. My more NORMAL stage times for that are upper 14s.)
While talking with another shooter about stage plans and such, I decided to draw to the hardest target on the stage (#4) and run a plan of 4, 5, 1, 2, 3. This pretty much goes against EVERYTHING I've ever done on an SC stage---my first shot tends to be one of my least accurate, so I try to always draw to something simpler.
My first run with the new stage plan was 0.3 seconds faster than my previous BEST run the old way. Every time I did it afterwards was at least 0.2 seconds faster---my WORST run the new way was still 0.2 seconds faster than my best run the old way.
That's ridiculous.
I realize that 0.2 doesn't seem like much, but that's a total of 0.8 seconds for a stage---and Steel Challenge stages are sometimes won by a few hundredths of a second. If I can save a full second (which is more likely), that's huge.
YUUUGE.
(For example, I easily ran a 3.00 Accelerator using the new plan. My previous BEST EVER single run was a 2.97.)
Now, this new plan did NOT work with .22 Rimfire or PCC for me. (I checked.) But for Production, the difference was significant. I could go into the reasoning, but that reasoning makes sense only in terms of
my specific skills---more importantly, the
different relative level of different skills I have.
My skills, relative to each other, have changed since I first started shooting matches. But I haven't re-thought (and more importantly, checked out on a timer) my plans in terms of those new skill levels. In some cases, a different plan might not make a difference.
But then again, it might. (As in this case.)
What skills of yours have changed? Will it make a difference to how you shoot stages? (I know it affects how I make my stage plans for USPSA matches---I just hadn't applied that sort of thinking to SC stages.)