Sighting in at exactly the same range as the score target is definitely a pleasant advantage. Unlike clay birds on the berm that may be 10’ below and 16/20’ in front of the Score target. Or steel plates that are often behind, but sometimes in front of the Score target. These different set ups require consideration to determine final Score Target impact. Of course everyone is at the same disadvantage, which should even things out. Except that home range shooters and others with experience on that range have often figured the solution to these disadvantages out. Traveling shooters likely have not. I shot a match once where the grass was so high on the berm, if you missed your sighter plate, there was no way to see the splash. I found bare dirt to sight in on, and managed to get one on the plate, then it was time to go for score.Yes, the sighter target gets pulled down with each shot and marked with an orange dot ( you may notice one in the picture) than we hang a record target over the sighter target prior to commence fire of the record string. ( you’ll see our record targets on the wall behind our crew waiting to be hung at the end of the sighter period)
Those who shoot at Deep Creek all tell what a fine experience it is. Hope I can shoot there some day.
I guess this rambling may serve to remind Me that a HUGE part of Long Range Shooting is the MENTAL GAME !!!