I don’t know for sure about the legal interpretation of this, but my understanding is that “supervising” and “using” are technically the same thing.
The point of the rule is that the LFAO can’t adequately supervise one rifle while using another. I would extend this to supervising two rifles at the same time.
I’d also question why you need to. Given both rifles need to be within arms’ reach of the LFAO, it’s only practical for one person to shoot at a time. It would be too tempting to split up once in the field to increase the group’s chances.
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