gmitchell said:
How much would the E targets cost for a 20 bench 1000 yard range?
Gordy
This is *NOT* a price quote, but if you are curious about ballpark pricing, figure on about $7500 per lane for a conventional chamber target system in which the e-target supplier supplies an outdoor high brightness monitor (e.g. Kongsberg, OzScore). For an open-sensor target system in which the shooters supply their own viewing devices (cellphone, tablet, e-reader, laptop etc) figure on $3500 per lane.
Note that just because you might have a 20-target range does not mean that you need to put electronic targets on all 20 lanes, even if once a year you run a big event that uses all targets. What usually makes sense is to buy enough electronic targets for your average/typical usage.
Also, the throughput on electronic targets tends to be higher than manually marked targets. It depends on how you organize your match in response to the faster per-shot marking and the elimination of range downtime for pit changes, but in many cases two electronic targets would handle the same number of shooters in a day that three manually marked targets would.
To decide whether or not your range can afford electronic targets, here's one way you can approach it:
- choose a sensible (business-like) period of time over which the e-targets must pay for themselves. Ideally three years is a nice quick payback. You can stretch it to five years, but it's usually not financially sensible to go beyond a five-year payback
- divide the purchase price of the e-target system by the number of years over which it needs to pay for itself (for example if you are buying a system that costs $3500 per lane and you want it to pay for itself in three years, then each year each lane of your e-target must earn you $1167.
- divide this annual payoff amount by the number of days per year of real revenue-making use your e-target will get. For example if you conduct 20 days of matches over the course of a year, your e-target will cost you $58 per day
- divide this daily cost of your e-target by the number of shooters it is going to serve each day. For example if you run your manually marked matches with four relays, you might run an e-target match with six relays. Allowing for not every relay being full it might be wise to plan for only five "paying" shooters per day on average, so that is $11.70 per shooter per day.
- Now figure out if you can afford this or not. Can you raise your match fees by $12 and have your shooters thank you for it or hate you for it? Or can you find some of that $12 already available in your match fee structure? While there is no getting around that it will cost you and your shooters (say) $12/day more, it also means your matches run faster and no one has to pull targets - is this a good deal to your shooters, or not?