Chronograph Problems
By the way, I found the low readings I had blained on shaking sensor cables was incorrect. The low readings were caused by rapidly changine sky conditions. The sky was 50-50 blue and small clouds that were moving quite fast, causing problems for the sensors. Today, I manually shook the heck out of the cables and that caused no problems.
The day is June 30th 2010, a bright sun shiny day 75 degrees and perfect for some load testing.
I set up my Pact Model 1 chronograph I had purchased in 1990. I have been having problems with this chronograph picking up readings when my shooting buddy fired his handgun 4ft to my right. I had tried covering the sensor cables, the brain box and whatever else the Pack people had told me to no avail.
True the bad nature of this Pact chronograph, it started off picking up every shot my buddy took. I decided to stand a 2’ x 6’ by 2” thick piece of Styrofoam in front of the two sensors, actually resting against the one nearest me. My buddy continued shooting and I got no more readings caused by his muzzle blast or shock wave.
Obviously, this is no fix to the problem. I even tried cutting the foam down to a height that would allow the use of the chronograph, but the problem came back. My buddy’s shooting caused readings and my own shooting cause readings in the 1225 fps range, which were way too high for the cast bullet load.
I called Pact knowing I had never received a satisfactory answer from them in the past. I described in detail the tests I had conducted today. Pat at Pact suggested turn the sensors 90 degrees to one side and fire in front of them. Also, I could try covering the brain box with something to prevent the shock wave from hitting it. My answer to that was, “You were not listening to me when I described the tests I had done earlier this afternoon. Protecting the sensors from the blast eliminated the problem. It is the sensors that are the problem, not which way the sensors are pointed or where the brain box is, which was behind me.”
Pat had no more suggestions, so I hung up and started considering my options.
Since I have a Pact chronograph purchased with an optional HP printer, both of which are no longer available, buying another manufacturers chronograph would mean both my printer and Pact chronograph are useless junk. There is nothing made today that works with the HP printer I have.
NO. 1 option appears to be – Buy new sensors and hope for the best.
NO. 2 option may be – junk what I have and buy something else, BUT WHAT? Is there a chronograph out there that provides most of the data my Pact does and print it out, that doesn’t have any problems?
I am not at all happy with the people at Pact. They really know little about their product and less about how to fix a problem. I asked if they maintained a file on problems users of their chronograph have had and what was done to fix them? They have no such file. You would think if the sensors have been a problem for many years in the past, perhaps they are still a problem. No suggestion that Pact had worked out a problem of sensors going bad.
Other than buying new sensors hoping that will fix my problem, I AM ALL THROUGH WITH PACT.
Guys, what is one or more of the trouble free chronographs that are on the market now?