Indoor Range Questions.
Posted: Tue Jan 06, 2009 10:26 am
As I said before, I usually shoot outdoors in the Francis Marion Forest but my last outing was quite distasteful. There were three guys at the outdoor range, and all three of them were alley (brass) pickers.
The one guy that usually hangs out there picking up unwanted brass for his own benefit and quite respectful, was joined by two clowns that were attempting to start a business crawling under foot during my shoot, and one guy even crossed the firing line while I was shooting because he saw a 'nice one' I was really ticked off. I won't lose sleep if they get shot in the butt, I just don't want to be involved in it.
I gave them a piece of my mind and reiterated the posted rules of the range, and the primary purpose of the range and left.
My indoor shoot later that day was only $6.xx and change but quite different. No windage and the noise booms when they put a little rim-fire plinker next to some of the cannons in other lanes, and the target bounces forever after railing it out.
I've figured out the 'doubling up' with hearing protectors (Foamies and Muffs) helps some but the bouncing targets are still a problem.
Can I clip lead weights on the bottom of my targets to dampen the bounce and where is the most (un)bang for the buck in hearing protection on the firing line?
The one guy that usually hangs out there picking up unwanted brass for his own benefit and quite respectful, was joined by two clowns that were attempting to start a business crawling under foot during my shoot, and one guy even crossed the firing line while I was shooting because he saw a 'nice one' I was really ticked off. I won't lose sleep if they get shot in the butt, I just don't want to be involved in it.
I gave them a piece of my mind and reiterated the posted rules of the range, and the primary purpose of the range and left.
My indoor shoot later that day was only $6.xx and change but quite different. No windage and the noise booms when they put a little rim-fire plinker next to some of the cannons in other lanes, and the target bounces forever after railing it out.
I've figured out the 'doubling up' with hearing protectors (Foamies and Muffs) helps some but the bouncing targets are still a problem.
Can I clip lead weights on the bottom of my targets to dampen the bounce and where is the most (un)bang for the buck in hearing protection on the firing line?