Exact times are not known, depending on weather conditions and other considerations. If you would like to help with mowing (you get to learn how to run a BIG mower) contact Marty Didion, the mowing coordinator, at martindidion4@gmail.com
About a year ago when we were brainstorming ideas about the
Silver Mountain Target electronic targets, one of the questions someone asked
was; “Just how will these targets benefit members who are not High Power
competitive shooters?
It was a valid question, so in the proposal I included electronic target Range Days that would be open to members and guests as well as a Deer Rifle Sight-In day. Our first Range Day in May was cancelled because of the WooHooFloo, so Saturday June 20th was our first opportunity to have open shooting on the electronic targets for members and guests.
Our High Power luck held out again and we had a nice day to
shoot. It was hot, but not “pass out in
your coat” hot. Ten shooters took advantage
of the opportunity, about half High Power shooters and half members and guests.
Electronic Target Range Day; Relay 2
The electronic target system worked flawlessly as we continue to work out issues and make fewer human errors. Everyone’s phone, tablet or iPad logged in with no issues and we had no target dropouts or interruptions. One guest shooter made the comment that the range at Roanoke needs to get one of these systems!
Thanks again to the people who help these events happen; Glenna, Mike, Marty and Aaron and Gary who stayed and helped us put things away.
Our next Range Day
will be a Deer Rifle Sight-In on October 24th at 10:00. We will offer sight-in targets at 100, 200
and 300 yards. As an example, if you
sight in at 200-yards, you can then shoot at 100 and 300-yards to get exact hold under/over
for the other two distances.
Now – just a couple of
stories:
About 9:30, Marty and I were going downrange to start
setup. I was coming up on the ditch when
a critter ran across the road in front of me – right to left. Rabbits, groundhogs, dogs and the occasional
cat are pretty common visitors to the range, but this was a solid black, low
slung, slinky critter that looked like it had a leash on its neck. It was gone in a flash, but after a second or
so, I realized that I had seen a mink!
Minks hang out along ditches where they find frogs, crayfish and other
delicacies and they are really not uncommon – just reclusive.
But, what about the leash?
It took another second or so and I realized that, of course, a mink
would not have a leash. This mink had
caught a small snake and was dragging it out of the woods. It just looked like it was trailing a leash. After he crossed the road, he dashed into the
weeds and went back down into the ditch to enjoy his breakfast.
There is another
critter story too.
Marty called my attention to a very strong, musky odor around
the dirt pile down by the pits. Now we
know that is a ground hog hotel, but this was a lot stronger odor than ground
hog. After a bit, we both agreed it was
definitely the smell of fox urine – the scent we use to cover our scent when we
go deer hunting. We’ve seen foxes at the
range several times, so we have a resident fox; maybe even a litter of fox kits;
just something to keep an eye out for. Maybe the foxes will discourage the
ground hogs!
When I woke up about 2:30 on Saturday morning, I thought I
was hearing a mouse gnawing on something in the ceiling. Then, as I got my wits about me, I realized
it was worse than a mouse – that was rain pecking on the window.
Aw Poooh – why does it have to rain on High Power Match
day?
I tossed and fretted until 5:30 and I got up and got my day
started. I looked at the radar from
several places and even though it was still raining, it looked like there was a
good chance it would break up even if we had to delay an hour.
But, by the time I got to the donut shop at Harlan, the rain
had stopped to the point it just needed an occasional swipe of the wipers to
keep the windshield clear. By the time I
got to the range –the rain had stopped and it looked like we would not get
rained on. Mike and Glenna had already gotten
the Stat Office set up started. We
waited a bit to be sure the rain was gone and we went downhill to start setup.
As we get more familiar with electronic target setup, we are
finding that four or five guys can set up an 8-target line in just about the
time it would take for 8 pit-pigs to go down and setup cardboard backers, smear
paste and put on paper centers.
Looking downrange from midline
When we started at 8:10, it was cool and cloudy. Jackets felt comfortable and that wind
straight from 6:00 was cold on the back of your neck. One target decided to act up, but we quickly
figured out a work-around and life just went on. The clouds broke up quickly and by the time
Relays 1 and 2 went back to 300-yards, we had just about as beautiful a day to
shoot as could be asked for. The light
was absolutely fantastic, wind was light and almost constant and the
temperature was “just right”. Relays 1
and 2 finished up at 10:49 – an 80 round match shot in less than three
hours. Good work guys!
Perfect light; no wind; this is as good as it gets!
The afternoon went just as smoothly; the rookie Range
Officer ended up setting up a pair of shooters to shoot on an MR-63 F-Class target
because of his fat fingers on the master control display. But, at least the shooter doesn’t have the
shot-out barrel he thought he had! Relays
3 and 4 shot their 80-round match in just under three-hours as well!
We had 23 shooters for the day out of 27 registered, with 4 shooters cancelling for last minute issues. We had some fantastic shooting, with many scores above 190 for the 20 shot stages. Joe Bakies took top spot for the day with a 790-26X, but his 199-12X at 300-prone took second place to Robert winding’s 199-15X. It was that kind of a day
Ready on the low end …
Results are:
First Aggregate: Joe
Bakies (Lima Sabers) 790-26X $ 71
Second Aggregate: Robert Winding 776-31X $ 51
Third Aggregate: Mike King (FWRR) 773-15X $ 28
High Offhand Joe
Bakies 195-5X
High Sitting Mike
King 198-5X
High Prone Rapid Geoff Branson 199-9X (Correction)
High Slow Prone Robert
Winding 199-15X
Creedmore Joe Bakies 199-12X
One of the visiting shooters commented, “I haven’t been here for a
couple of years. I forgot just how
pretty this range is.”
Our next High Power activity is a Range Day for just fun
shooting on the electronic targets on June 20th starting at 10:00.
The next 50/80 Match is July 11 – it starts at 8:00. Although I have not heard from the NRA, this
may be the first NRA Approved Match of the season.
Electronic Targets at the ready- The wind hasn’t picked up as yet!
Saturday, May 9th was the inaugural 50/80 Match on the new Silver Mountain electronic targets. Our target setup can support five active shooters per relay (one target is held as a spare in case something happens with an active target) and we had scheduled two relays in the morning session and two relays in the afternoon session. Twenty shooters quickly pre-registered for the two sessions and as things progressed, three shooters had to drop out and they were quickly replaced with three more.
Saturday morning dawned as a frosty morning; there was frost on the grass over much of the range – but the wind was initially calm. We had scheduled to have our first shot go down range at 9:00, but the first and second relay had gathered by 8:40 and when Jim Sweeney, the FWRR President arrived for the First Shot Ceremony, we got things under way. Jim noted that “… the future of organized High Power shooting was moving toward electronic targets and this match marked the start of a new chapter of FWRR High Power.”
Jim Sweeney fires the Ceremonial First Shot at the Inaugural Electronic Target match
As the first and second relays moved through the match, the
calm wind conditions that existed at the start of the match quickly changed – and
gusty, cold and blustery winds became the rule.
In accordance with social distancing guidelines, competitors were asked
to wear masks except when actually shooting and it turned out that masks came
in handy just to keep noses warm! By the
time we moved back to 300-yards, several shooters were heard to make the
comment “I can’t feel my fingers”. Such is
May in Indiana.
But, if High Power shooters aren’t complaining about being
hot, they have cold to mumble about, so we went back to 300-yards and finished
the match. The morning session closed out about 11:15; two-and-a-half hours for
an 80-round Regional Match Course.
As the morning shooters packed up and headed to the house to
warm up, the afternoon relays took to the course. We started about 12:00-noon and finished at
3:00. The afternoon relays might not
been as cold as the morning, but the winds became even more blustery as the day
progressed. One afternoon competitor
measured winds at 25 MPH with gusts to 32+MPH.
Relays 3 and 4 – Sitting Rapid. Note the wind ribbon on the scope stand
But all in all, it was a good day. Competition for top spot was close, but Joe
Bakies from the Lima Sabers “Creedmored” FWRR’s Mike King to take top honors for the
day
Match Winner: Joe
Bakies 772-25X
Second Place: Mike
King 772-22X
Third Place: Mark Richard 762-18X
High Junior: Madeline
Schnelle (Wildcat Valley) 564- 4X
The electronic target system worked well. There were some issues with targets going off
the air, but we believe that this is due to some super-cheap Chinese cables
supplied with the batteries. We have
replaced those cables with regular cheap Chinese cables and we believe that should
eliminate cables as an issue. We also
had several bullets just vanish on the way to the target (probably about five
bullets), but we believe that the extremely blustery winds might have had
something to do with that. A 99.68%
arrival rate isn’t bad for a first outing.
I want to offer special thanks to the crew who acted as “Pit
Sitters” for us; Marty Didion and Chip Seidel in the morning session (thanks
for the donuts Marty) and Mike King and Mike Bailey for the afternoon. Having people in the pits to resolve battery
and cable issues as well as swap out target faces was a huge factor in moving
the matches along.
And, as always, another huge THANK YOU to
Glenna and Mike Grannis for their willingness to be my Stat Office; collecting
money and registrations, gathering and tallying scores and just running around
and helping in a lot of places.
Our next match will
be June 13th – the second Saturday in June.
As of now I plan to run five relays in this match; two morning and three
afternoon relays and I plan to start the match at 8:00 so we won’t run so late
in the afternoon. By 8:00 we have absolutely
fantastic light on those white plastic target faces and it will make for a good
early session. This will give us places
for at least 25-shooters, and if several things develop as they promise to do –
we may have room for up to 35 shooters that day. Stay tuned for more information on this!
Fairfax, Va. – Due to the current state of affairs surrounding COVID-19, the uncertainties associated with this pandemic at present, and shutdowns across our country that have impeded vital preparatory work, the National Rifle Association has made the difficult decision to cancel the 2020 NRA Precision Pistol Championships, July 1 -5, 2020, 2020 NRA High Power Championships, August 9 -25, 2020 and the 2020 NRA Smallbore Championships scheduled for July 23 – August 4, 2020.
We are trying to make the best of the current situation by moving forward with range construction and other improvements as we look towards the 2021 NRA National Championships season. The NRA is also exploring the feasibility of hosting a variety of new NRA events at Camp Atterbury (if conditions are favorable) with the state of Indiana later this year.We share your disappointment that we had to cancel these competitions. The NRA wishes everyone good health and the best of luck. Stay safe and healthy.
Since Governor Holcomb has allowed Central Indiana High Power to hold matches at Camp Atterbury this weekend (May 2) , I am moving ahead toward FWRR Matches on 9 May.
We will shoot the match in two sessions; a morning session that will shoot at 9:00 and an afternoon session that will shoot at the completion of the morning session – just like Nationals at Camp Perry. In each session I will shoot two relays of 5 shooters – a total
of 10 shooters per session.
I am requesting that everyone preregister so I can assign folks to sessions and relays. Because of the range limitations, I may not be able to accept everyone’s registration or accommodate them in their requested session. You can register at FWRRHPDIRECTOR@aol.com. Please register by Sunday, May 3rd; tell me morning, afternoon or don’t care. I will notify you when, where and if you are registered.
The morning session will register at 7:30 and I will ask
about three people to help me set up in the pits – social distancing again. Once we get a full session, we will start
even if it’s not 9:00.
The afternoon session will register at 11:30 and we will move to the 200-yard line as soon as the morning session clears the 300-yard line. We should shoot no later than 12:15 or so. I will ask some folks from the second session to help secure equipment after the match.
This will be our first electronic target match as well as our first match conducted under COVID-19 protocols, so we will be doing things a bit differently. This is not an NRA Match. We will probably have a learning curve with the targets since we did not have our practice match. I am going to run block time for slow fire strings with unlimited sighters. For rapid fire strings, I will run block time for Prep and unlimited sighters.
Match Ground Rules
If you don’t feel well, if you have a fever, if
you are coughing, have a sore throat, if you’ve been exposed to someone with
CVD-19 (you know the drill by now) – please
stay home.
As a courtesy to other shooters, I am asking people
to wear a mask except when you are on the firing line shooting. Scorers, please wear a mask.
I am going to spread out the firing positions a
bit (orange marking paint). Targets 3
and 4 will be offset to the left, target 5 will shoot straight on and targets 6
and 7 will be offset to the right.
Paper score cards will be used as official score
records. Tablets, IPhones, etc. will
take the place of spotting scopes.
We closed out the Winter Offhand Season with a bang, really a bunch of bangs, on Saturday March 14th. The day dawned grey and overcast, a bit cool at about 40-degrees but the wind that had been so brutal on Thursday and Friday had stopped and overall it was not an unpleasant day for shooting.
The group gathered early and we sent the first shot downrange at 8:48, a few minutes before the 9:00 published start time. The range was full, with 12 shooters filling up all 12 positions.
Firing Line; Winter Offhand – March 14, 2020
We were done by 9:45, a quick pleasant match.
Mike King – ISRPA 2019 High Power Champion
Mike King took top place for the day with a 380-8X, but Randy Jahn shot a season high 380-6X to take second place as Mike Creedmored him.
Big Gun 3 – Bob Davis, M1A
Bob Davis rounded out the top three with a 370-5X. Now, for the season results. Remember, we take the three best scores across the season.
First Place Mike King 1139-21X $39.00
Second Place Mark Walters 1115-19X $26.00
Third Place Randy Jahn 1100-10X $13.00
X-Man Award Mike King 21X $13.00
An old Naval Academy tradition is an award for the guy who hung in there and just kept plugging away, the award for The Anchor Man.
Big Gun- Mike Bailey, 1917 Enfield
Anchor Man Mike Bailey 816-1X $5.00
I will write the checks for the awards and I will have them with me so I can present them when we cross paths. Thanks for everyone coming out and I hope you had a good season.
Big Gun – Jeff Beierke, M1 Garand (another M1 to his left)
March is the time for the Final Four in basketball, but if
you’re building e-target frames – it’s the time to finish off the final four.
I’ve pretty well finished up the last four frames.
The Final Four TargetsThe target frame workbench
They are a bit different (better I hope) than the first four. The frames are not really that heavy, but they are a bit much for a little short guy like me to get his arms around. These last four frames have a hand-hole in the top center of the target to make handling the frame easier. If you look at the pictures, you will also note that there is a target number in the upper left hand corner of the target. If you are shooting through a ‘scope, it’s hard to see the number boards way out in front of the pits. This number, hopefully, will make crossfires a bit less likely. One last improvement, the Coroplast backers are stapled to the wooden frames with 9/16” staples. I was concerned that the staples might not hold all that well in the soft pine frames, so on these last four targets I put a bead of Liquid Nails glue under the Coroplast backer to hold it to the frame. It may be a problem to get it off in two or three years when we need to replace the backers, but that may well be an issue for the next guy to solve!
Detail of target number and hand hold
Our e-target setup will have five primary active targets (I
plan to shoot five shooters per relay) and one active target to be available as
a shooting hospital in case of a malfunction of any of the primary targets. In addition to the six targets that have
electronics for scoring, I have built two spare target frames with backers and
faces. These two frames will be spares
in case one of the six active frames gets broken. Until they are needed as replacements, these
will be inactive hospital targets.
(Every shooter always needs the opportunity to crossfire!) The five primary active targets will be targets
3 through 7. Target 8 will be the
standby, and target carriers 2 and 9 will have non-functional hospital targets
in them.
We have a combined High Power Work Day and Practice Match on
March 21st. We need to move cardboard
targets out of the target shed to make room for the new frames and we need to
put the final touches on just how we will set up the frames in our
carriers. Once we get that done, I want
to shoot a Practice Match to make sure that the electronics and the Range
Officer are ready for that first match in April. If you come to work, the Practice Match is
free; if you come to shoot, the fee will be $10.00.
For a change the weather prognosticators were right and Saturday morning was better day for a torpedo shoot than any kind of a rifle match. Over the course of the morning it went from a drizzle to a downpour and back – several times.
We had changed the event from a Winter Offhand Match to an
electronic target learning session. It
was a learning session because all of us were going to figure out things about
our system.
There was a brief introduction to the system and review of
how it works, and then we went over how we intend to set up targets for a
match. We covered sensor setup, cables
and target insert installation.
Then, we took all the time folks needed to figure out just
how to set up their display device (Smart Phones, dumb phones, tablets, Ipads,
Fires and whatever) to connect to our server system. It was good to see everyone helping one
another. No one person knows just how
each and every device works, but one way or another, we figured out how to get everyone
hooked up.
I demonstrated how shots show up on the display, and then I
divided up the group into “Target 4” and “Target 6” teams and we shot a match
on the simulator. We shot slow fire
strings, we shot rapid fire strings, we learned how to handle cross fires and what
to do about just out and out misses.
There were questions asked – some of which I could answer,
some we just haven’t decided the answer as yet – and some I just don’t know –
but I’ll find out.
Probably the most amazing thing at the session was what we
found when we took a break. Most of us
have never been out at the range in a serious rain storm, so today was a first
for us. Check out the pictures of the
creek. The creek flows from north to
south (right to left) across the range.
On the north side of the bridge that crosses to the 100-yard targets,
water had backed up like the bridge and culvert was a dam. Drift junk has piled up like a beaver dam on
the north side of the bridge and just to the south of the bridge water was
spilling into the ditch like a waterfall.
What a mess!
That’s not water over dam – it’s water over the bridge – with a waterfall just downstream. Note the “Beaver dam” pile of trash
Unless things just don’t work out, I plan to hold this same
training session later this month as an evening session for members who couldn’t
make this session. I am going to send
out a notice to the High Power group as well as a general notice to the club. Thanks to everyone who came out today – it was
a good day!
Well, the High Power Elves were busy over Christmas; cutting, screwing, clamping, gluing, stapling, measuring twice and trying to cut just once – and we now have four electronic target frames completed. We’re halfway there!
Mike Grannis and I plan to go to the range on either January 2nd or 3rd to calibrate the three new targets. (We will decide which day based on weather and just what kind of a mood we are in …). If you want to come out to help, observe, kibitz, make helpful suggestions or take a few shots – welcome! Gripers and complainers – just stay home.
Harrumph! I will post a High Power email with details as we get closer.
At the January Winter Offhand Match, I plan to have the usual 12 targets as well as the addition of targets E1 through E4 – these four targets. You are invited to use them in the January match if you wish. This will give me some experience in managing several shooters at a time. If we run into uh-oh’s or aw-pooh’s, I will let the brave volunteers reshoot on manual paper targets.
I invite folks to bring some extra ammunition. Then, after the formal match is over, I want to do some more shooting on the electronic targets. I want to run some rapid fire strings and I want to simulate things we see in a match like misses and crossfires. We will shoot until everyone who wants a turn gets a chance – just stay and help me tear down.
I am excited about using these in our summer matches. They promise to make matches run faster and … NO PIT DUTY!
Well, for two months in a row we have had a good weather day
for a Winter Offhand Match. Saturday December
14 was just about as mild a day as we could ask for in mid-December; about
35-degrees, no wind and an overcast but bright morning. We had eleven shooters show up – and at least two
more sent notice that family obligations had to take precedence this month. (That’s one reason we only count three of the
five matches for season aggregate!)
By 8:50 we had a full line and no one else in the parking
lot, so we started a bit early. By
10:15 we were done and the day’s standings were as follows:
First: Mike King 382-6X
Second: Randy Jahn 372-2X
Third: Mark Walters 369-7X
This was also the first time we have used our Silver Mountain
Targets E-target in a match setting. I
had a high level of confidence that the target would work well, but a lot less
confidence in how I would be able to run the system when someone’s score
mattered. I asked Mike King if he would
be my guinea pig for the debut – since he is the State High Power Champion, I
felt confident that he would do well in this first test.
Mike did very well, as the scores above show. And, I was pleasantly surprised when the practice in my basement in how to handle things worked out nicely on the range. In addition to just watching shot placement on the target, folks looked at how the system shows shot velocities and how it calculates the standard deviation of velocity across the string. Once Mike finished his two strings and saved his target on his phone, the rest of us played with the target for a bit and I practiced deleting cross-fire shots and inserting misses into a shooter’s string.
When we went down-range and compared the group on the tablet
to the actual group on the target, if there was any difference in the two it
was hard to see and by anyone’s judgment it was much less than one-half of a bullet
diameter.
Here is the actual target face at the end of the day. Only one of the shots out in the white is Mike’s, his second sighter was out at 8-o’clock. The others and the .308 holes were added in our after match activities. If all goes well, I want to try to have at least three e-targets for the January match so I can get some experience in managing several shooters at a time.
Actual Target Face
It was good to see some familiar faces we haven’t seen for a while. Russ Bell came out to shoot today, he’s been buried with work and stuff for the last couple of years. Marie and Dennie Shook came out to visit and kibitz – it was good to see them as well.
Our next match will be January 11 at 9:00 AM. Come out and shoot – or just come out and visit for a while.
A line from a movie says; “I love it when a plan comes
together!” Well, today a plan came together.
A week or so ago Mike Grannis and I went out to the range to set up the
first electronic target and calibrate the target face to the frame. Well, it didn’t work out so well the first
time and we went home with our tails between our legs to learn a bit more about
the software.
I did some studying, set up a six-target system in the
basement and played with things for a while.
Dave Schnelle answered some questions and late last week I was ready to
try again. Mike and I went out to the
range this afternoon and started the process again. We set the target up at the 100-yard line and
went through the setup and calibration process step-by-step.
We’re glad no one was around to watch the process. Having two retired engineers try to read a
set of instructions on operating a computer system is, to say the least,
interesting. Mike had his iPad, I had my
Nexus 7 and we followed each other along as we tried to figure out the simple
directions. It was an “Insert Tab A into
Slot B while folding at Line C” procedure and each step was thoroughly debated
before any buttons got pushed.
But, after a while we got things going and it was time to put a hole in the target to do the up-down, left-right correction. Mike got to do the honors and shot a 10, just out of the X at 11:30. The uncalibrated system showed it as a 9, just out of the 10 ring at 11:30. We went downrange and measured the vertical and horizontal offsets from the center of the X. We went back to the warm clubhouse, (thank you Mr. Sweeney) – made the conversion to millimeters and punched them into the system!
SON OF A GUN! The shot’s location on the two displays
popped to exactly the position it had been on the target. We looked, compared and decided that it was
time go for it. I put on my Range
Officer Hat (really a warm fuzzy cap today) and called the shooter to the line. I set Mike up for 2 sighters and 10 shots for
record on a 200-yard target.
Electronic Target on 100-Yard Line Yes, it was that dark, dreary and sloppy!
Things worked just like we had hoped they would. The system marked the first two shots just where they were on the target and labeled them S1 and S2. The third shot was labeled as 1, and so on it went through shot 10. I had Mike shoot mid-ring shots, shots at 12, 3, 6 and 9 o’clock out in the white. He finished up with X-ring shots to close out the string. The system scored properly, every shot showed a velocity and there was a running calculation of velocity Standard Deviation as the string progressed.
My confidence in the system went up a lot on the third shot in the string. According to the system, Mike put a shot right on the 10-ring at about 2:30. When I took a look through the spotting ‘scope, there the hole was was, sitting on top of the 10 ring line right where it was supposed to be. (You can see the hole in the actual target and Shot 3 on the display)
TargetView Display on Nexus 7 Tablet Note location of shot 3 – right on the lineActual Target Face Compare Shot 3 on 10-ring line at 2:30 to TargetView Display
There is more testing to be done and I still have to learn more about the operations I need to do to run a line efficiently. But, we have demonstrated that we can build a stable target frame, can set up a system and have confidence that the system is telling us what is really happening downrange.
Many thanks to Mike Grannis for his advice, insight from his experience with his SMT system and sweat and chilling as we learn how to make this work.
For the last several months, we have had issues with the propane furnace in the Clubhouse out at the range. The initial issue was with the gas valve. Jim Sweeney replaced the gas valve and the unit operated intermittently for a while; then the igniter didn’t spark. Jim worked on the igniter circuit, cleaned contacts – adjusted points – whatever, and it worked intermittently again.
By now, too much time and money had been spent on it and by the time we would have had a professional come out and take a look at it – we would have had over half the cost of a new unit in the repair on a well-used unit. So, the decision was made to just drop in a new unit. Guess what – the new unit didn’t work either.
After some more checking and poking about, it turned out that the pressure regulator on the propane tank had failed. The propane guy said “Well, they hardly ever fail”, but after he checked all of our work – guess what? It had failed.
The heater wants about 1 PSI gas pressure – not a lot of flow. The regulator on the tank had failed and was putting 50 PSI to the heater gas valve. The valve is designed as Fail Safe – it just won’t open with that much supply pressure on the inlet side. Good idea – that much gas would blow the back out of the building if the igniter tried to light it.
Now – we have a new furnace (the old one really was past fixing), we have a new regulator on the propane tank and – we have heat in the building! Thank you, Jim Sweeney, for dealing with all of the aggravation.
Saturday, November 9th was the opening match for the 2019 –
2020 Winter Offhand season. This was the
first time we have held this match on a Saturday morning, and 12 shooters came
out for the match
The weather looked a lot like Indiana in winter, about 30
degrees and overcast – but no wind to speak of.
The line filled up early and we got underway at 8:55. The final Cease Fire was at about 10:15, so
it was a quick match.
Mark Richard “Creedmored” Mike King to take the top shooter
of the day position. Both Mark and Mike
shot 377’s, but Mark’s 7X bumped Mike’s 3X into second place. Mark Walters took third with a 364-4X.
The Overachiever of the Day award goes to Kris Hartwig with
a 168-0X in the first string. Kris shot
a 1917 Enfield with an open ladder sight that required him hold on the target frame
for an aiming point.
The first target frame and electronics of our electronic
target system were on display and several folks took the opportunity to log
into the server hotspot on their phones.
I plan to have the first target active for the next match to give me
some experience on managing an active target.
Our next match will be the second Saturday in December –
December 14th at 9:00. Come on out and join us.