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Really nice spot!!
Just don't anchor your targets in to concrete, keep them portable. The benches are for bird watching, wildlife watching, right. PM me if you have any questions about permanent fixtures in a range.
Either the target stands or the benches have to be portable.
Again wish I live closer to the hat.
 
That stock is pure ###! I've been looking for someone to make a custom tactical wood stock for a while and it looks like I found them! I hope they deliver to Canada...


Thanks!
 
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Lol, no doubt.... Damn you and your awesome shooting area AND uber sweet garage. Good for you man. ;)
 
What a nice place to shoot. Is the photo taken recently, or is it from a while ago (just wondering if you are able to shoot at this time of year or if you are snowed in).

Have you ever thought of using an electronic target? (PM me if interested)
 
the pictures would have been from aug/sept. There is a foot or so of snow out there rite now but I still go out and shoot.

What is an electronic target?

(Fair warning: I sell them, so take everything I say with an appropriately-sized grain of salt. Also, I really don't want to spam CGN, so I'm a bit hesitant to get into posting much more than "this is what an e-target is".)

Here's a an electronic target system ("e-target"), installed on a 6'x6' target frame on a nearby 1000m range.
P1080459-600px.JPG

It detects the arrival of the bullet using sound sensors, which you can see in the corners (rectangular blocky things with a small dot off-centre, and a small coax cable leading away).

The yellow box houses the measurement electronics. It is placed in a protected location so that it can't be hit by a bullet. When an incoming bullet triggers the mics, this info is sent uprange.

On the firing line, a "server" unit (silver-coloured box here) talks to the target(s) downrange, and broadcasts this information via a wireless LAN to shooters, scorekeepers, spectators and range officials on the firing line and vicinity.
P1080431-600px.JPG


Shooters use portable display devices (smartphone, iPad, laptop, or an e-reader in this photo), to see where their shots land.
P1080432-600px.JPG


Here's what the shooter sees on the display panel
P1080434-600px.JPG
 
+1 for Daniel's system. It works very well and it is very handy. I don't know about you but I have trouble seeing bullet holes past 400m ... the "e-target" can plot your shots and you can see the plots on you IPhone or tablet etc.
 
Like I said, I'm reluctant to post too much here, lest I inappropriately cross the line over to spamming, so I'll keep my comments as brief as possible. Contact me by email dmc@danielchisholm.com if you want detailed info.

Tikka223, thanks for the kind words.

TrxR, bush1: Sorry, no useful website to send you to yet. Have simply been too busy working on hardware, software etc to get around to a website (which is sorely needed).

About a month ago our system was demo'd at 800-900-1000yards in New Zealand. It will also be demo'd there next week, during their national matches:
ht tp://www.nranz.com/news/electronic-target-system-trialled-seddon-range-trentham

If anyone wants to troll through a large but disorganized set of photos, this is all I can offer:
ht tps://docs.google.com/folder/d/0B-PCFNDGQaSEQ1BkQ3hRYU81cnM/edit

Cost: to get the first target running costs $4600 ($1800 for the server and $2800 for the yellow target box). For each additional target you add another $2800 yellow target box. This makes it a bit "rich" for single-target installations; the current architecture is oriented towards clubs and rifle associations. Having said that, I have made several single-target system sales to individuals with their own range.

Note that one target can keep a *lot* of people busy, happy, and shooting all day; one target should handle 6-10 shooters.

The server is designed to handle up to ten targets (yellow boxes) at a time. The yellow boxes are completely independent of each other (you could set up one 300m in front of the firing point, another at 600m, and another at 900m, and then spend the day shooting three different distances from the same firing point).

The measurement accuracy depends on a number of factors, principally the speed of the bullet as it hits the target, and the amount of wind and gusts at the target. It tends to be "more than precise enough to be useful" for many applications (meaning that the measurement error of the target system is a small fraction of the grouping ability of the rifle/ammo combination being used). At short range (100 and 300), typically precision is a bullet diameter or less (so - it is not precise enough for 100 yards benchrest shooting; but it is precise enough for 300m F-Class shooting). At 600, precision is half an inch or so. A .308 with good ammo at 900m will usually be measured to an inch or better, if the wind isn't too terribly gusty.
 
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