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Depending on the light, time of day and the direction of the range, seeing bullet holes can be difficult to impossible at times. Some clubs have determined that cutting a hole in the backer behind the aiming black or even larger helps with this. Other ranges also put something white behind the target frames. So it becomes rather range specific and a good spotting scope is essential in any case.Chuck you should have an email with our old 30 year design/material list.....
Also Chuck the backer is required behind the Target, don't worry about seeing holes, that's why the NRA allows Spotting Scopes......
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Depending on the light, time of day and the direction of the range, seeing bullet holes can be difficult to impossible at times. Some clubs have determined that cutting a hole in the backer behind the aiming black or even larger helps with this. Other ranges also put something white behind the target frames. So it becomes rather range specific and a good spotting scope is essential in any case.
I have shot some smallbore prone and am familiar with backers. It seems reasonable that, as you say backers, would be a requirement for high power NRA Approved or Registered reduced course events. I have attended some reduced course events where targets were scored on frames rather than in the pits and none of the events used backers. So, I just spent some time with the NRA Rule Book and I can not find a rule that requires this. Can you cite the rule that addresses this requirement?I know all about it, have shot Service Rifle for over 40 years....and again a backer is required if NRA Approved or Registered.....
Yes, it is stapled to the frame, either wood or cardboard. I looked in "Range Standards" and there is nothing there relative to the requirement for the use of backers.Yes reduced course is scored in the Frames when Pits are not available, off the top of my head I think it was under Range Standards....doesn't mean it's still there as it's only a suggestion for Electronic Targets.
What do they have behind the Target, nothing and stapled to a wood frame?
I am considering that issue. My thinking is that I may not make the cardboard square as I show in my sketch but make it rectangular allowing a high and low position for the target. Even a one foot difference in the two positions would help and two feet would probably be enough that it is not noticeable. Also, some ranges are not level between the firing line and the target frame so that could be helped with this concept.I have not shot a 100yd reduced match in years, but I do remember that at that short distance, the difference between offhand and prone was a problem. How about a target frame in the shape of an 8, that allows you to place the target in a high position for offhand, or low position for everything else.
Yes, it is stapled to the frame, either wood or cardboard. I looked in "Range Standards" and there is nothing there relative to the requirement for the use of backers.
Now I understand your meaning, I was thinking of the smallbore "backer" where they look for crossfires. Yes, the target should be attached to a backer, cardboard, plywood, etc. Thanks for staying with me until I get it.See you have a backer.....I would refrain from wood unless, like my frame drawings you have a hole for the bullets to pass thru covered by cardboard, the splintered plywood is not fun to be around.
I know at one time there was something in there about having a backer behind the target, it couldn't just be in the air by itself, who knows when that changed...
Where I shoot, we have frames which hold two targets side by side. Sighter shots on the left, record on the right