When I’m driving down the freeway,I have an inadvertent habit of looking at license tags on vehicles. This habit comes from a previous line of work as an investigator. I cant seem to shake this habit.
When I’m at the Rifle range, I set my 70lb rail gun up on a concrete bench. Sometimes I use superfeet,Sometimes I don’t. I prefer to lightly tap the Rail bottom legs to the bench.
I then focus the scope,on my rail gun, to get a clear picture of the target at 100~200yds. At this point,I have an inadvertant habit of watching the cross hair to see if it moves. I do this on a day when there is no mirage(Overcast).
When the wind blows,the crosshairs move at some ranges. I then slightly lean against the Concrete Bench,while looking through the scope. Again, the cross hairs move at some ranges.
I understand that there is not a target frame made that will survive the constant barrage of high velocity lead projectiles. Eventually ,something gives. Couple that with the effects from Mother nature and its not unusual to occasionally see target frame movement.
Concrete benches can be stabilized. Talk to shooters who have shot at a specific range a long time. They know which benches are suspect and they try to avoid them during practice. Come match day,it’s a luck of the draw. Bench rotation levels the,field to some degree. Target frames is another issue.
The unstable fixtures become serious variables in the pursuit of extreme accuracy. What are your thoughts on this issue or non-issue.
Glenn
When I’m at the Rifle range, I set my 70lb rail gun up on a concrete bench. Sometimes I use superfeet,Sometimes I don’t. I prefer to lightly tap the Rail bottom legs to the bench.
I then focus the scope,on my rail gun, to get a clear picture of the target at 100~200yds. At this point,I have an inadvertant habit of watching the cross hair to see if it moves. I do this on a day when there is no mirage(Overcast).
When the wind blows,the crosshairs move at some ranges. I then slightly lean against the Concrete Bench,while looking through the scope. Again, the cross hairs move at some ranges.
I understand that there is not a target frame made that will survive the constant barrage of high velocity lead projectiles. Eventually ,something gives. Couple that with the effects from Mother nature and its not unusual to occasionally see target frame movement.
Concrete benches can be stabilized. Talk to shooters who have shot at a specific range a long time. They know which benches are suspect and they try to avoid them during practice. Come match day,it’s a luck of the draw. Bench rotation levels the,field to some degree. Target frames is another issue.
The unstable fixtures become serious variables in the pursuit of extreme accuracy. What are your thoughts on this issue or non-issue.
Glenn
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