disagree completely with the rule interpretation for stages in IDPA (or at least the thinking behind it) and the Classic division complaint. First off the IDPA one, dumbing down a stage to suit a particular gun choice or physical handicap weakens the whole point of the exercise. Now bare (bear? it's 4:30am and I've been up 24hrs) in mind I don't actually shoot IDPA, but knowing the history of the sport somewhat and having a decent idea about what can happen in real life, 4 targets in the open, at anytime, during a stage is certainly realistic and valid. The exaggerated "tacticalness" of the stage design is pointless and removes any sense of realism in my view. As does the low port interpretation. Sometimes it just plain sucks being old, fat and lame, but guess what, in real life I might need to hit the dirt and get back up. those who have a problem with it aren't in contention for winning, so making rules to accommodate them in such a way is pointless.
IPSC Classic division, well honestly, you pick your gun knowing what to expect, you pick Major so you get more points for those Cs and Ds, you pick minor for the capacity. Some stages one is a definite advantage over the other, but it goes both ways. Blame the rules, not the stage. Reloads are a part of life, having to do them at inopportune moments is too.