Fwiw, I did not read the OP and subsequent posts by the OP that he hadnt read and didnt understand the evals. There is zero question that the protocol used is insufficient to pass a “scientific” threshhold as youd find in a standardized test such as those used by ASTM, UIAA, etc—it simply isn't consistent enough. In that regard, the OP is 100% correct. I just dont think thats really the goal of the evals, or at least not the entire goal.
Some relevant questions though, are:
1). what is the actual goal of the evals? Is it to create a “industry standardized test”? Or something different?
2) if a truly standardized engineer/scientist-approved test were designed, what would us as consumer LOSE? Ie is there value in the “quick and dirty” method that would not exist in the “sciency” method with regard to shooter education, troubleshooting, etc?
3) if a perfect test were designed, who will do it, and who will pay for it, and what will ensure that manufacturers do more than ignore it? Look at the pew science tests on suppressors and the controversy that creates because its a pay to play model where the “consolidated ranking” is based on a proprietary weighting, even if the raw data is public.
So imo the “criticism” is entirely valid IF you are approaching it like an “official” standard. The problem with that is that trying to make the evals “fully scientific” and 100% controlled/quantifiable, would necessarily AUGMENT the evals, not REPLACE the evals. So if you are trying to offer actual solutions, as opposed to just trying to poke holes, you should have some actual specific solutions, you should be specific about the goal, demonstrate an understanding of the current protocol in place that attempts to address that variable, as well as address both the positives and negatives of making that change.