I prefer to use the exact paper they use on match targets. That way i can look at the holes for tuning. You cant do that with just any paper
Yes. They are the official target supplier for most matchesDusty; you buying those from the manufacturer printed on the the target?
I'm with you K22! Only I use the back of NRA 200-yard or 300-yard replacement centers, having quite a stock of them on-hand. And for 200-yard testing, place either what amounts to a 1/2 min Birchwood Casey blaze target dot at that distance, or even a 1 min, at center of target. Thereafter I click left or right and up or down to shoot my test groups without worry of shooting-up my center aiming point. By just turret manipulation, I can put up to 64 shot groups on the target back at 200 yards, but don't ever go that far.I don't do much bench shooting but when I do for load development or initial scope sight in, I simply use a Birchwood Casey target dot pasted in the center of a sheet of white (Brightness 95) copy paper*. Simple and cheap. For me, if the target gets too complicated or messy, I will focus on the target rather than the reticle which leads to poor shooting.
For practical practice for varmint / predator hunting, I use a 3 x 5 card which simulates the vital area of a ghog / predator. I staple on a piece of brown cardboard and shoot off my shooting sticks at various distances to test my field marksmanship capability, ability to read wind, and deal with mirage. This represents the vast bulk of my shooting.
*on the 8.5 x 11 copy paper I draw a cross centered on the paper so I can center the target dot.

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