I have been attending Dixon's fair since the beginning, every year, with the exception of a few times when I was waylaid
by daughters getting married, body parts failing, etc. During all these years I have never entered a gun inito the judging competition. Not that I was afraid of how much they would knock it down, I just didn't care to do it. Several things can happen to an individual after having his gun judged there. I have seen a guy get best gun in the show with
Ted Cash thimbles, right out of the bag. I have seen guys get great scores and it went to their head, suddenly their
prices jumped, however, they were still making the same grade gun. By the same token, you could get a lousy score and
feel downtrodden, and maybe even take up golf. I remember when the late Ron Ehlert entered a fabulous Jager rifle,
carved, engraved, fantastic gun......it did not score well with the judges.....it didn't fall within the realm of a Pennsylvania
gun. Acer, bear that in mind when you enter your life's work. Before I would enter a gun into judging, I would rather take it to a Bill Shipman, Allen Martin, Mark Wheland, Brad Emig and ask them for a critique....ask them "where can I improve, or what would you have done differently?" Nontheless, I think the Judging portion of the gunmakers fair is a
great thing, people work from year to year, trying to improve their work and get a better score, and, after all, that is the
basic purpose of the Gunmakers Fair. I think we all would agree, Chuck Dixon has sure created a fantastic thing for gun
builders, unlike anything else in the world......thanks, Chuck............................Don