I believe the e-Target systems do have a place in benchrest.
IBS short range requires an additional backer besides the moving backer for short range group.
NBRSA requires a moving backer. Both to prove there really are 5 shots on the target and in the case of the IBS, to help determine where an errant shot may have came from.............well, because not all cross fires are mistakes and folks sometimes do not own-up to the errant shot.
Using moving backers or e-Targets for counting shots at long range was discussed on this forum several years ago because groups are getting smaller. It was a good and friendly discussion as I recall. When you look at the tiny group Bart Sauter shot which is the current world record for a single target shot at 600 yards, it is not hard to imagine the case where a target gets disqualified for only having 4 shots on target when there really are 5 but there is no evidence to prove that on the paper.
View attachment 1521143
World Record group shot by Bart Sauter in IBS 600-yard Match on April 21, 2018 in Memphis, TN. 0.282 inches, 0.04 MOA... at 600 Yards. Simply amazing... What can we say... this 0.
bulletin.accurateshooter.com
As a match director I have seen many times the referees doing mental gymnastics having to tell a friend they are DQ'ed from the match because the target only shows 4 shots. I have been in that pair of sneakers myself, and have also been the recipient of the call. When I looked at my own target, I could not see any evidence to point at either.......... but I let five go and I know how well my rifle was shooting that day.
I know we had a range in the south that was using e-Targets to count shots instead of moving backers in the short range game, and it was working for them. So the electronic target systems do have a place in benchrest. In my opinion they are likely better that any other system we have for counting shots and determining the angle of incoming shots.
View attachment 1521145
The yaw in the above screen-shot is the angle of the bullet as it approached the target. In this case, I had my system set well off from square to the firing line. But as you can see, it does show the angle and would help prove if a shot came from the correct bench or the rascal down the line.
Using e-Targets for sighters shots is also a very good use of the systems. With e-Targets we do not have bullet fragments from sighter plates to deal with. Which as a match director the safety issues this causes is real. Shooters can readily see their sighting shots and make adjustments with out having to do the mental match to figure out how much to move the sights or hold off because the clay targets are on a berm well in front of of behind the record targets. The real time aspect of sighting shots, and going to record with out a delay from the pits is also a big factor.
How accurately the systems place the shots relative to the paper target is the only question in my mind.
Adam is telling me if the frames are constructed without warpage, are absolutely square to the firing line (this means the bullets are close to a right angle ((90*)) when they cross the microphones listening area), and are not blowing in the breeze, we should see 1mm accuracy. By the way, the frames on most ranges with pits have plenty of movement in the wind also. Evan brought that point up several pages back on this thread and it was ignored. No system is perfect.
Below is part of the last correspondence with the good folks in Canada.
Hi Clay,
In Benchrest, since you are sighting on one target and scoring on another, it's important that the calibration on all of the aiming marks be correct. That means that constant errors due to the frame being crooked will matter and will show up as an apparent calibration shift when you move between aiming marks.
Therefore I think it is important to fire shots in the corners of your active scoring area to ensure that the calibration (center of group, not random error) is close enough everywhere on the frame that matters. In a perfect world, when everything is measured perfectly and there is no movement, every shot will be within 1mm. It's always a matter of the type and amount of sources of error that apply.
Thanks,
We are still working on this project, and I will post updates as we get testing done. Weather conditions are tripping us up this week, so tests of any quality will have to wait until the current storms clear out of the valley.
I heard a rumor that there are a few short range group shooters in Calif that were working on some accuracy tests for their sport. If anyone has info on testing being done, please send me a PM or connect through email or phone. There are a Lot of really good minds on this forum, sharing info will help us all.
CW
wcrsc600ibs@gmail.com