Let's face it. It is consistent with a Pa. Dutch county fair, just uniquely focused on our interests and lots more fun. Not to mention that if it were not financially important to both the operators and the vendors, it would no longer be.
It is an important local event and the Dixons and their staff are to be commended. Well organized and maintenance of an ambiance that is an overall great time.
The formula seems to be working for everybody.
Every county fair in these parts has a pie contest. Mostly for ladies, but no one would object if a man enters a pie. So it is with Dixons, but here it's just a few guys judging guns rather than pies, gratis, and it all boils down to two things... presentation and taste.
All joking aside, if one were to be able to compile a collection of evaluation sheets from numerous entrants, then study them, most likely the trends of the judges' focus would reveal strong patterns. Considering that the procedure boils down to a negative, or point-off for flaws methodology, this could easily be quantified. This would yield the judicial expectations for the perfect pie or rifle, depending on what is being judged. If they were to photocopy all the sheets for, say 5 years, make a compendium, this would quickly reveal their recipe.
My guess, and this is only unsubstantiated conjecture, is that the senior judges look first at architecture, flow, gracefulness, and in traditional class, conformity to judges' interpretation of the school. If a piece passes this test, it is examined more closely for workmanship and hand skills. A piece that passes all that is likely set aside with a couple others that are really neat rifles. At that point it is just like the pies...a matter of taste. It is beyond discussion, other than flavor.