Outdoorsman,
I have a full set of Hood flags, with all the parts and pieces. There are daisy wheels, counterweights for no daises, small vanes, big vanes, ribbons, and surveyor's tape. I have compared all the combinations for responsiveness, and to other flags. I give up a little quickness with the weight of dual vanes (which I trade for being able to see quartering angles better), but save some weight by using the shafts that were meant for the daisies, with the counterweight that was sized for them, with the shaft extended all the way. It balances. We typically have light winds that can be very switchy and inconsistent down the range. The Visalia range is literally down in a rectangular hole, with berms piled up, almost vertically on three sides. In these situations, responsiveness is the key, and since the flags so often disagree, and switch so quickly, conditions often favor the "picker". This requires remembering what a condition looked like, and for this, keeping it simple works the best for me. I started out with daisies on my flags, but with flags in such constant disagreement, and forming such complex patterns , one can easily go into information overload. I just spoke with a new shooter that shot his first agg, that was made up entirely of teen groups. only to come in second at the yardage. The day before he shot a rang record at 200 in sporter. I think that he said that it was a .105. I guess the point of all of this is that the conditions in different parts of the country probably favor different wind reading equipment.
Boyd