The bull's eye/rifle analogy was to describe precision versus accuracy, not something specific about a particular printer. Hopefully it was helpful. Precision and accuracy get used interchangeably in colloquial use, but they have specific definitions in engineering and scientific context (i'm an engineer).
kirk
kirk,
Your bullseye analogy is quite good but invoked some additional discussion as to the fact that each printer maker has, for whatever reasons, targeted their unmanaged color RGB space differently so the RGB 128,128,128 does not produce L*=50. People naturally think of a bullseye as centered and hence should target L*=50. whereas each printer design may and do have different mappings. However, it's also obvious from your comments you know this and were not implying that RGB 128,128,128 should produce L*=50. I found your comments quite clear and well stated.
As an aside, here's one way to identify how a manufacturer maps their RGB device space if, for instance, we wish to know what color a printer is designed to print 128,128,128 as.
1. Create an image patch in Photoshop filled with RGB 128,128,128.
2. Assign the printer/paper profile to that image.
3. Convert the image to Lab colorspace using Abs. Col. Intent.
4. Examine the Lab value. This is what the printer manufacturer has targeted.
To the extent wear and tear, manufacturing variations, and such come into play the printer actual color printed may vary from this. Custom profiles provide a way to compensate for these.