Author Topic: Hunter Pistol with no 75 yard mound!  (Read 624 times)

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Offline jeremiahm

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Hunter Pistol with no 75 yard mound!
« on: June 01, 2004, 10:47:08 AM »
I want to keep shooting hunter pistol at my club, the only problem is, we have no 75 yard mound, just a 50 and a 100.  We raised the turkeys so they set with the 100 mound directly behind them.  We thought we would run the chance of a richochet off of the range surface, so that's why we raised them.  Does anyone see anything wrong with this?  Does anyone have any suggestions on how we should raise them?  

Does anyone else out there have the same problem?  What do you do?

Offline Smokin7mm

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Hunter Pistol with no 75 yard mound!
« Reply #1 on: June 02, 2004, 02:57:46 AM »
Shouldn't pose a problem.  As long as misses are impacting the berm.  The biggest problem you will run into is bullet impacting the ground and coming up and leaving the range.  If this is a concern berms should be added behind each bank of targets.  Safety is always the best approach.

Offline K2

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Hunter Pistol with no 75 yard mound!
« Reply #2 on: June 02, 2004, 10:37:48 AM »
Follow the guidelines of the NRA range book.   smokin is right on target on what the ground can do to the path of the bullet.  Soft sandy loam soils are much less of an issue than would be gravels or rocky soils.  Tell your shooters as well to keep their fingers off the triggers until the sights on on the targets  :wink:

Whatever you do do your best to keep any bullets from leaving the range property.   ote="Smokin7mm"]Shouldn't pose a problem.  As long as misses are impacting the berm.  The biggest problem you will run into is bullet impacting the ground and coming up and leaving the range.  If this is a concern berms should be added behind each bank of targets.  Safety is always the best approach.[/quote]