There were a number of times I wanted to.Are you shooting at the monitor???
There were a number of times I wanted to.Are you shooting at the monitor???
There were a number of times I wanted to.
I don't see bias but the acoustic center being positioned slightly right of center. Take another look at the 3 shots at 2:00 and 2:30 just outside the 10 ring (actually 1 is clearly a 10 on the paper) Add in the 2 other shots inside those and a clear X is now a 10. Clearly the acoustic center is shifted slightly so the shooter received no advantage.Take a really close look at the picture above. If you look closely, the shooter got some bias out of the system. A lot of benefit in that lower left corner.
Take a really close look at the picture above. If you look closely, the shooter got some bias out of the system. A lot of benefit in that lower left corner.
If someone crossfires on your target, were you stuck waiting 7 seconds after their shot?
The thing that *everyone* is not getting, is that the paper target does not matter. It's only there to show you that the pattern and spacing on the paper, matches the pattern and spacing on the display. There is no relationship between the rings on the target and the display, other than the target face gives you somewhere to hold. In the case of the target displayed, the system center (or target face that was pasted up) is off a little bit, but the only place that matters is that the shooter would take a click or two to be centered up on the system.
The thing that *everyone* is not getting, is that the paper target does not matter. It's only there to show you that the pattern and spacing on the paper, matches the pattern and spacing on the display. There is no relationship between the rings on the target and the display, other than the target face gives you somewhere to hold. In the case of the target displayed, the system center (or target face that was pasted up) is off a little bit, but the only place that matters is that the shooter would take a click or two to be centered up on the system.
I'm looking at the holes in relationship to one another, not the rings on the paper. If you consider that shots in the "9" line on the left are plotted a little right of there on the score sheet, then you should also see the shots on the right side plotted proportionally equally right of the position of the holes relative to the rings. That simply is not the case.
I can see quite easily that the accoustic center was off a little both horizontally and vertically.
I'm thinking that the system, when showing shots overlapped, would correspond with holes significantly closer together than the ones in the lower left.
I realize that the game is what the game is, and electronic targets are the wave of the future. I'd just like to have a lot more confidence in the precision.
To the best of my ability.And you are taking into consideration that the display is zoomed out, so that the plotted shots are something like a magnitude larger in aspect compared to what is on paper?
You are on the right track. Read this SMT test report, if you haven't:To the best of my ability.
Consider the 5 shots just outside and touching the right edge of the 10 ring on the plot. the 4 that are in almost a vertical line show up nicely with an approximately correct offset when compared to the farthest left impacts on the target. Where is that 5th shot? I'm guessing it's the one that is quite a bit farther to the left almost to the X ring.
Long story short, the target presented gives me reason to question the precision of whatever target it was fired on. I think it can only be resolved by a well designed experiment conducted during a match or several matches.
You are on the right track. Read this SMT test report, if you haven't:
https://sites.google.com/site/targettests2016/home/smt-2017
You are on the right track. Read this SMT test report, if you haven't:
https://sites.google.com/site/targettests2016/home/smt-2017
I'll give it a try.... "IT DOES NOT MATTER TO A PAPER TARGET OR CLOSED eTARGET THAT IT MOVES BACK AND FORTH IN A WIND OR IS NOT QUITE VERTICAL. SILVER MOUNTAIN TARGETS HOWEVER DEPEND ON THE ARRIVAL OF A SHOCKWAVE OVER A PLANE SURFACE OF ACCURATELY KNOW ORIENTATION, PREFERABLY PERPENDICULAR TO THE LINE OF FIRE...The whole concept of a perfect SMT set-up is totally different from paper or closed eTargets and it requires a very different mindset...the misconception seems more prevalent among SMT target users that the calibration process can make the target perfectly accurate."Anyone able to give a quick summary for dumb guys like me?
Assuming all the targets were calibrated about the same
No: "...the misconception seems more prevalent among SMT target users that the calibration process can make the target perfectly accurate"Calibrate targets off 30 shots at match distance if possible