I've done some searching for ways to track shots on target, and I've tried a few, still looking.
The range I shoot at now is limited to 300 yards, I may look for some longer ranges but, for now, it's 300.
With a 10-50x60 riflescope I can see the holes, up close if I want, but 20x is enough. I have used the tried-and-true drawing the bullet holes on a piece of paper, it works but, I'm retired, I don't care much for paperwork any longer, lol.
I tried a tripod-mounted DSLR camera with a claimed 40x optical zoom and more megapixels than sand grains on the beach, it worked-ish. The holes were visible during playback, but just barely, and that was at 200 yards.
Also tried a Longshot Hawk wifi camera which bolts onto a spotting scope. The amount of time required to get everything perfect exceeded my range time budget. Even then, the results were poor at best. I think the underlying problem with a spotting scope approach is the field of view (FOV) is larger than a riflescope; all I want to see is the target. Dialing up the magnification on a spotter to compensate makes it so jumpy, it's frustrating to work with.
From what I can tell, the Shot Marker system is the gold standard but, it's expensive and requires specialized target frames that aren't practical at this time, at this range.
Figured I'd ask here for ideas or suggestions for what works, and doesn't cost a king's ransom. I'm just an avid rifle shooter, not a competitive shooter, tracking shots would be a nice to have, but not a must have.
Thank you.
The range I shoot at now is limited to 300 yards, I may look for some longer ranges but, for now, it's 300.
With a 10-50x60 riflescope I can see the holes, up close if I want, but 20x is enough. I have used the tried-and-true drawing the bullet holes on a piece of paper, it works but, I'm retired, I don't care much for paperwork any longer, lol.
I tried a tripod-mounted DSLR camera with a claimed 40x optical zoom and more megapixels than sand grains on the beach, it worked-ish. The holes were visible during playback, but just barely, and that was at 200 yards.
Also tried a Longshot Hawk wifi camera which bolts onto a spotting scope. The amount of time required to get everything perfect exceeded my range time budget. Even then, the results were poor at best. I think the underlying problem with a spotting scope approach is the field of view (FOV) is larger than a riflescope; all I want to see is the target. Dialing up the magnification on a spotter to compensate makes it so jumpy, it's frustrating to work with.
From what I can tell, the Shot Marker system is the gold standard but, it's expensive and requires specialized target frames that aren't practical at this time, at this range.
Figured I'd ask here for ideas or suggestions for what works, and doesn't cost a king's ransom. I'm just an avid rifle shooter, not a competitive shooter, tracking shots would be a nice to have, but not a must have.
Thank you.