The drums are painted blue. They are painted pretty often for the sake of seeing new holes, or splatter. The holes are of various sizes, from 22-30 caliber, but yes, the holes are larger than they would seem to be because the egdes do fold back.
Conditions at 6 am were as you would expect in Alabama. It was light enough to see the targets, and holes in drums. The sun comes up at the shooters 4 oclock and sets at the shooters 10 oclock. Once the sun started getting up and bringing mirage with it, at about 9 am, the clarity was still excellent. You could count the holes easily. At 10 am, you could still see and count them very easily. At 11 am, mirage starts to get the better of ANY optic and small details get lost. Even Leica's APO spotter struggles on this range. Much over 10x past 11 am and things look more like they do when looking through a digital camcorder, with digital zoom. You know what I mean, clear, optical zoom is good but once digital zoom takes over, it looks more like shaky blocks of color. Mirage on this range will challenge you. Your target will wander around by at least an moa, every direction. Palma can back me up on this.
This range is very flat and is surrounded by tree's and temps get up to 105 with ease. No such thing as a constant wind of any sort. Goes from 1-5 moa value one direction, to the same in another direction, all in the time it takes to load the next round.
I shot an NXS 5.5-22 at this match for 2.5 years, and I can see certain things better with the March, than with the NXS, even in the mirage.
Conditions at 6 am were as you would expect in Alabama. It was light enough to see the targets, and holes in drums. The sun comes up at the shooters 4 oclock and sets at the shooters 10 oclock. Once the sun started getting up and bringing mirage with it, at about 9 am, the clarity was still excellent. You could count the holes easily. At 10 am, you could still see and count them very easily. At 11 am, mirage starts to get the better of ANY optic and small details get lost. Even Leica's APO spotter struggles on this range. Much over 10x past 11 am and things look more like they do when looking through a digital camcorder, with digital zoom. You know what I mean, clear, optical zoom is good but once digital zoom takes over, it looks more like shaky blocks of color. Mirage on this range will challenge you. Your target will wander around by at least an moa, every direction. Palma can back me up on this.
This range is very flat and is surrounded by tree's and temps get up to 105 with ease. No such thing as a constant wind of any sort. Goes from 1-5 moa value one direction, to the same in another direction, all in the time it takes to load the next round.
I shot an NXS 5.5-22 at this match for 2.5 years, and I can see certain things better with the March, than with the NXS, even in the mirage.









