HuntingNut
HuntingNut
   Login or Register
HomeCommunity ForumsPhoto AlbumsRegister
     
 

User Info

Welcome Anonymous


Membership:
Latest: IPutMoInYoA
New Today: 0
New Yesterday: 0
Overall: 13131

People Online:
Members: 0
Visitors: 175
BOT: 1
Total: 176
Who Is Where:
 Visitors:
01: Photo Albums
02: Forums
03: Forums
04: Home
05: Forums
06: Forums
07: Forums
08: Home
09: Forums
10: Forums
11: Home
12: Home
13: Forums
14: Photo Albums
15: Forums
16: Forums
17: Photo Albums
18: Forums
19: Forums
20: Forums
21: Forums
22: Photo Albums
23: Photo Albums
24: Forums
25: Your Account
26: Your Account
27: Forums
28: Your Account
29: Forums
30: Forums
31: Forums
32: Forums
33: Forums
34: Home
35: Forums
36: Home
37: Your Account
38: Photo Albums
39: Your Account
40: Forums
41: Photo Albums
42: Forums
43: Forums
44: Forums
45: Forums
46: Photo Albums
47: Forums
48: Photo Albums
49: Photo Albums
50: Forums
51: Home
52: News
53: Forums
54: Forums
55: Forums
56: Forums
57: Photo Albums
58: Forums
59: Your Account
60: Your Account
61: Forums
62: News
63: Treasury
64: Your Account
65: Photo Albums
66: Photo Albums
67: Forums
68: Forums
69: Photo Albums
70: Your Account
71: Forums
72: Forums
73: Photo Albums
74: Forums
75: Statistics
76: Your Account
77: Forums
78: Photo Albums
79: Home
80: Forums
81: Forums
82: Statistics
83: Forums
84: Photo Albums
85: Forums
86: Home
87: Forums
88: Home
89: Home
90: Treasury
91: Forums
92: Forums
93: Forums
94: Your Account
95: Forums
96: Home
97: Your Account
98: Home
99: Forums
100: Forums
101: Forums
102: Your Account
103: Photo Albums
104: Forums
105: Photo Albums
106: Home
107: Home
108: Home
109: Forums
110: Home
111: Photo Albums
112: Forums
113: Photo Albums
114: Forums
115: Forums
116: Home
117: Home
118: Forums
119: Your Account
120: Photo Albums
121: Forums
122: Forums
123: Your Account
124: Home
125: Forums
126: Photo Albums
127: Statistics
128: Your Account
129: Forums
130: Forums
131: News
132: Forums
133: Forums
134: Your Account
135: Photo Albums
136: Your Account
137: News
138: Forums
139: Home
140: Forums
141: Forums
142: Home
143: Forums
144: Photo Albums
145: Forums
146: Your Account
147: Photo Albums
148: Forums
149: Your Account
150: Your Account
151: Your Account
152: Photo Albums
153: Photo Albums
154: Forums
155: Your Account
156: Your Account
157: Forums
158: Photo Albums
159: Home
160: Photo Albums
161: Home
162: Your Account
163: Home
164: Home
165: Home
166: Your Account
167: Home
168: Photo Albums
169: Forums
170: Home
171: PointBlank Online
172: Forums
173: Forums
174: Home
175: Statistics
  BOT:
01: Your Account

Staff Online:

No staff members are online!
 

Coppermine Stats
Photo Albums
 Albums: 308
 Pictures: 2452
  · Views: 824614
  · Votes: 1316
  · Comments: 86
 

  Targets and Scopes

ShootingTargets and Scopes

By Ed Harmon

Did a thought ever occur to you, while shooting on paper, that your target was not quite right? If you had that thought, join the crowd of about 90% of scope shooters in the world. Most paper targets are simply not designed for serious scope shooting. The targets look like they should work OK, but in actual practice; they do not work that well at all. The diamond is not right, nor is the bull’s eye circle. The crosshairs printed on paper is not correct either, nor is any combination of the above target designs.

I ran a range for over 20 years. During that time I observed shooters dragging all manner of targets to the range. I finally decided to put that experience and over 20 years of competitive shooting into harness. So, several years ago, I set about designing a target just for crosshairs and red dots, not one but two very different targets. I also ran tests with various power scopes to determine the best power setting for very accurate shooting on paper at 100 yards. The intent was to develop a target that gave the shooter confidence in the results of three shot and five shot groups, primarily for load development. The idea was to also have a good idea about the group size looking through a spotting scope.

I think I shot on just about every target design printed both for sale and in books. None of the designs worked that well. It was always difficult to tell with clarity, one shot from the next, exactly where your crosshairs were positioned in relation to the exact aim point. The group size, estimated from 100 yards away, was a pure guess, mostly wrong.

What I first designed was a 1-inch square, with heavy lines for sides. The idea was to shoot the corners using the vertical and horizontal sides to position the crosshairs on the corners of the square. That was Ok, but when you tried to focus on one set of lines, the crosshairs, the lines became difficult to acquire and maintain focus upon. Next I increased the lines of the square in width. The result was better but still not quite right. Then I created a solid black square, walah, it worked like magic. Next the size of the square was worked on. It was found that a 2-inch square was perfect. The idea is to hold the crosshairs just off the corner so as to create a very narrow white line between the crosshairs and the sides of the square, vertical and horizontal, corner to corner. You duplicate the line, shot after shot. The scope is always kept on the vertical and horizontal plane in relation to the square itself. You eliminate the effects of the great scope bug-a-boo, canting.

How to improve the square, well I created a grid that is comprised of 1-inch squares with the 2-inch black square super imposed in the middle. When printed together and shot upon you can immediately tell the approximate group size. You can also tell over, under or horizontal adjustment. The grid permits you to get sighted in with just two adjustments and no walking. The shooting square upon square is attached, life size for copying. The square on a square target was created using Microsoft Word. You can convert the target back to word using Adobe Acrobat or you simply print the target on your printer.

Next we attacked the real problem and the one that there simply are no targets for, the red dot sight.

I experimented with a fellow in the 80s on circle sights, front and rear. The idea is to create concentric circles of the sights with the target in the middle. Your eye aligns the circles and the point of impact is the center. The sight system works real well, it just takes a bit of time to align the sights from shot to shot, for real accuracy. We worked on this project for about a year and a half after work.

The reason I have gone into the explanation is so that you have an idea about the source of the inspiration for the red dot target. The target is a black circle of such size that a red dot fits into the circle with a white ring around the dot, between the red and the black. The effect is three circles that your eye will align, shot after shot. This allows load development with a red dot sight at 50 yards, without any magnification. Does it work? We have used the target shown to shoot .100-inch groups at 50 yards. The target attached is designed for a 4-minute dot at 50 yards. The circle can be created and enlarged with most word processors. The dot target itself was created with Microsoft Word and converted to a photo file. If you have Adobe Acrobat you can reverse the process and create a word document from the jpg file.

A secret to sighting in dot sights is to turn the power down as low as possible to still be able to see the dot. The outside of the dot becomes clear which allows for good definition between the black circle and red dot. If you turn the power up to far on a red dot sight, the edge of the dot gets furry or blurred.

Scope power for shooting paper at 100 yards should be a minimum of 12x in order to achieve the very best groups. Groups can be shot with less power, however the process is a strain once you try a 12 or more power scope.

Last but far from least, while you are on the paper you should also test your windage and elevation adjustment to see what they actually are. Rarely will an advertised ¼ minute adjustment actually produce ¼ inch adjustment. Many ballistics programs today will allow a click adjustment print out to be run, based on your actual velocity and bullet BC. I keep a small font print out on all of my scope bells from 200 to 600 yards in 50-yard increments for the bullet and load I am shooting.





Posted by SwampFox on Tuesday, September 26, 2006 (16:54:27) (14054 reads) [ Administration ]
Related Links
 More about Shooting

Most read story about Shooting:
BUILDING THE SWEDISH MAUSER SPORTER
 

Article Rating
Average Score: 4.24
Votes: 25


Please take a second and vote for this article:

Excellent
Very Good
Good
Regular
Bad

 

 

Valid CSS! Valid HTML 4.01!
Click to check if this page is realy HTML 4.01 compliant for speed :)

All logos and trademarks in this site are property of HuntingNut.com.
The comments are property of their posters, all the rest © 2011 by HuntingNut.com
Interactive software released under GNU GPL, Code Credits, Privacy Policy

.: Upgraded to DragonFly 9.2 by *Dizfunkshunal* :.